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The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
#31
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
The bible suggests, repeatedly, that killing people based on a voice in your head (or even someone else telling you about a voice in their head) is a good way to act.

If you accept crap like this, then you have no grounds to condemn anyone who ever does something, claiming "God told them to". ISIS, for example. Or any random nutcase gunman.

It's not hard for the side that won to write "God made me do it" in the report.
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#32
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
Sure it's based on intellect and reason. You just don't see it that way because you're focused on the attack on your invisible friend.

Simply put Yahweh's morality is a reflection of the people who invented him. If it was the other way around -- if Yahweh invented the Hebrews, then their morality would be a reflection of his morality. Instead we get excuses that it was the culture of the time. It's poor justification. One such characteristic of a Supreme Being would be-- if they are the absolute authority on morality, their morality would be absolute. A Supreme Being would not condone the rape of a woman and force her to marry her rapist because of the culture of the time, the stoning of a woman who isn't a virgin on her wedding day, or the stoning of someone who worked on the sabbath. These sound emotional, but they're also logical. Why would a Supreme Being limit their morality to the morality of their chosen people? That would--by definition -- make them not a supreme being.

Now if you want to get into the emotional side -- the fact that I refuse to worship your god even if he did exist, then we can do that too. I mean your god is an asshole who promoted sexism. As a woman I cannot understand how another woman could ever be a Christian. The things the bible says about women alone is enough for me to choose Satan over Yahweh.
The whole tone of Church teaching in regard to woman is, to the last degree, contemptuous and degrading. - Elizabeth Cady Stanton
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#33
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
(January 22, 2016 at 12:59 pm)athrock Wrote: 3. It is evident that the Israelites didn’t literally kill every single Canaanite man, woman and child, because the Canaanites continued to appear in the Bible long after the time when they were allegedly wiped out. It is more likely that the authors of the Old Testament books used metaphorical or hyperbolic language to express the message they wanted to convey about Israel’s victories over the Canaanites.

Still departing from the text whenever you find it convenient to do so, I see.
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#34
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
(January 22, 2016 at 12:59 pm)athrock Wrote: Many people argue that God acted immorally in the Old Testament when He ordered the Israelites to destroy the Canaanites who were living in the land that God had promised to Abraham and his descendants. However, there are several reasons why this is a poor argument.

Okay, let's see what we can do, then.
 
Quote:First, if God does not actually exist, then the accounts of His deeds in the Old Testament are meaningless fables, and it does not matter what these stories claim about God.

Sure, but we can entertain an idea and consider it within its own contextual framework without accepting it to be true, I hope.
 
Quote:Second, if the purpose of objecting to Old Testament accounts is to hold God and His followers to a standard of behavior, then it is reasonable to ask whose standard should be used and why?

Yes, it is reasonable... but I think you haven't fully reasoned it out yourself. Believers tend to do this a lot, they ask this exact question, "what standard should we use?" but not a one of them realize that the same question could be asked of them: what standard are they using, and why? To avoid beating around the bush, we both know it's god's standard, but why should that be the one? Aside from irrelevant, non-sequitur temporal appeals ("god made us, therefore he gets to set our morality!") and mystical claims with no justification at all ("god's nature is inherently good, therefore it's the standard!") there generally isn't a reason given. God being the standard is generally just a circular argument, routing back to god's own standards in order to judge god good: how does one come to the conclusion that god's standard should be morally acceptable, using only readily demonstrable claims that do not simply circle back to god?

On my part, I use a rational consideration of the situation at hand, within the objective framework of the reality we all inhabit. It's a big topic, not one I'm going to be able to comprehensively explain here, but essentially, I take what I know about human beings as life forms use what is objectively good or bad for them as a basis for what is and is not moral to do to them. My standard isn't a "who," it's not just what somebody else says, it's reality.
 
Quote:[*]The Canaanites were actually a perverse people, and God patiently waited 400 years (from the time of Abraham to Joshua) allowing the Canaanites time to amend their evil ways. Instead, their wickedness actually increased, so God used the Israelites to punish the Canaanites for their sins – just as He had punished all mankind by means of the flood earlier, the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, and even the Israelites themselves by means of forty years spent in the wilderness and the Babylonian captivity. Clearly, God was no harder on the Canaanites than He was upon His own people.

"Wickedness," in this case, because god is the standard, simply being "the things god does not like." So when you say the Canaanites were wicked and hence worthy of being wiped out, you're playing a bit of a shell game and what the bible actually means can be represented as "the Canaanites were doing things god didn't like, and so god was right to have them all murdered." Doesn't sound so good when you aren't automatically assuming the primacy of god's moral commandments, eh?

Moreover, I disagree that genocide is ever the correct response to evil: just ignoring the fact that the Canaanite children were slaughtered too despite not being morally culpable for the actions of their forebears, it's easily within god's power to change their minds or otherwise resolve the situation without having to kill them all. Life ought to be preserved, and there was a peaceful option here that god just plum didn't want to take, cuz he was mad. And before you give me any free will crap, god clearly didn't care about their free will when he sicced his hitmen on them, so that's wrong from the outset.

Quote:[*]The Canaanites had the opportunity to flee; by choosing to stay and fight, they resisted God and sealed their own fate. 

They were being driven out of their home by what was, from their perspective, a band of invading barbarians set on killing them all. Look, I know you really, really, really think god has the authority to decide that, but "resisting god," is not some automatic crime worthy of a death sentence unless you're capable of arguing why that is, and that's a big thing you don't even seem interested in doing. All you've got right now is this might-makes-right claim that they fought back, therefore the deserved to be slaughtered, which is no different than "of course I had to kill her, she kept resisting me when I was raping her. She knew what was up."

God's not getting automatic credit for being perfect and just being cosmically bestowed with the authority to do whatever he wants in my classroom: you gotta earn that shit.

Quote:[*]It is evident that the Israelites didn’t literally kill every single Canaanite man, woman and child, because the Canaanites continued to appear in the Bible long after the time when they were allegedly wiped out. It is more likely that the authors of the Old Testament books used metaphorical or hyperbolic language to express the message they wanted to convey about Israel’s victories over the Canaanites.

Gee, I'm sure "hey, we only wiped out most of your people and took the only home you'd ever known on the whim of a capricious invisible spirit," was huge comfort to the survivors. Rolleyes

Quote:Each of these points suggest that there is nothing inconsistent or contradictory about the Judeo-Christian view of a God who is both loving and capable of wiping out evil.

... Just so long as you follow the christians along in just presupposing, sans argument, that god is the ultimate moral authority because god says so.

Quote:Ironically, atheists often ask, “If God exists, why doesn’t He prevent evil?” The destruction of the Canaanites is an example of God putting an end to evil practices (such as child sacrifices to a false god) just as these atheists demand. Unwilling to let go of this convenient (if impotent) cudgel, however, atheists continue to object to God’s judgment and destruction of the Canaanites—a clear example of wanting to have it both ways.

No man: the destruction of the Canaanites is an example of god paying a greater evil to stop evil, even assuming that the Canaanites were evil in the first place. Within the context of the bible's morality but without presupposing the primacy of that morality, the only thing the Canaanites were guilty of was offending the delicate sensibilities of some invisible guy. That's the "sight unseen," version, but even working from the idea that the Canaanites really were performing harmful actions, god had a whole suite of more peaceful, morally acceptable solutions available to him than indiscriminate slaughter. There is no sense in which genocide was anything but an enhancement of evil.

Quote:Finally, while objections to the immorality of the God of the OT may explain why one may not be Jewish or Christian, they offer only an incomplete explanation for why someone is an atheist since there are many alternative views of God that do not require acceptance of anything from the Bible.

So what? I don't think you'll find an atheist here who'll state that they came to their belief system solely on the basis of a single argument. That'd be a deeply simplistic view, don't you think?
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#35
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
Quote:First, if God does not actually exist, then the accounts of His deeds in the Old Testament are meaningless fables, and it does not matter what these stories claim about God.

You finally got something right, Asssrock.
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#36
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
(January 22, 2016 at 3:28 pm)athrock Wrote: I understand your response. It's based upon a powerful emotional reaction.

But not upon intellect and reason.

This is a bullshit reply. Emotion and reason can certainly conflict at times, but they are not mutually exclusive.

As far as I can tell, this thread is nothing more than an attempt to resolve the problem of evil by arguing "who are you to judge?". This hardly merits a response.

The God of the Bible is a demonstrably evil prick. Those deeds that can be labeled good don't change this. This ledger accounting of morality is the same as saying "I know he's a rapist, but he's an all around good guy because he also helps feed the poor".

Redefining evil as the absence of good also doesn't work for you. Evil and good are subjective evaluations of moral behavior on a scale that changes not only over time as cultures evolve but at any given point in time between different cultures. This treatment doesn't even survive superficial consideration from your source:
”For thus saith the Lord; as I have brought all this great evil upon this people, so will I bring upon them all the good that I have promised them” (Jer. 32:42).

Your only real option regarding the problem of evil is to evaluate as good the behaviors of God that the vast majority of your fellow humans, believers or not, quickly classify as evil. Good luck with that argument.
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#37
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
(January 22, 2016 at 3:07 pm)athrock Wrote:
(January 22, 2016 at 2:30 pm)drfuzzy Wrote: YAY!!  All of my financial problems have now been solved.  If your GOD tells you to take something, then it's not stealing!!!  And you can't say GOD didn't tell me to do it.  Rape, murder, theft - all ya gotta do, folks, is say that your GOD demanded it, and you're golden.

True.

But you better be able to prove that God actually told you to do it.

Which is why Pharaoh saw all the signs and wonders performed by Moses for example.

Or why Jesus rose from the dead after saying he would.

If you're gonna claim that God told you something, you better be prepared to back it up.

That's the problem, exactly.  Pharaoh didn't see any signs and wonders, because the Exodus didn't happen.  Jesus didn't do the zombie dance either.  I can't probe God told me anything, they couldn't, and you can't.
"The family that prays together...is brainwashing their children."- Albert Einstein
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#38
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
(January 22, 2016 at 2:43 pm)athrock Wrote:
(January 22, 2016 at 1:38 pm)Whateverist the White Wrote: The shoe may be on the other foot.  It is no concern of mine that the god of bible does what I would call immoral if men did it.  It causes me no conflict because I'm willing to call that spade a spade.  I think it is you that is made uncomfortable by all this, not atheists.  But hey, if it helps you to project one side of your internal debate out there onto atheists in order to work through your issues, I'm glad we can help.

This is a weak argument, and I see it all the time in this forum. "Oh, it's you believers who are trying to convince yourselves." No, Whatever, it really isn't. Believers believe. It's non-believers such as yourself who cling to the notion that God is immoral who must try to explain away rational explanations of God's actions.

IOW, atheists understandably ask hard questions. Believers reply with reasonable answers. Now, the ball is back in your court to deal with the implications of those answers. And simply repeating the questions is not the response of an intelligent man.

I wasn't trying to make an argument. I'm just pointing out that I and plenty of other atheists do not care about the supposed immorality of God. We understand that He is a character in a book of fables and as such he can be menacing, good or evil in turns, whatever. There simply isn't any problem for me since I don't believe and I don't care. That isn't an argument, it's simply a fact.


(January 22, 2016 at 2:43 pm)athrock Wrote:
(January 22, 2016 at 1:38 pm)Whateverist the White Wrote: Promising to hear you say so.  I quite agree.  But thank you, no thank you.  I'm not having any more gods.

Oh, you're lack of belief might be rational, but that doesn't mean it's reasonable.

I never said it was rational. You may as well tell me it isn't reasonable of me not to share your interest in stamp collecting. Reasonable or not, I don't and I don't care whether you think that's reasonable.
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#39
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
What are you trying to get at, athrock? We're not stupid people here. We each have good reasons to be against the morality expressed in the Old Testament. Even you yourself implied you have an issue with genocide and slaughter of people. But unlike you, I believe (as do many others) that genocide is repulsive no matter what. So even if God exists, and even if God commanded me to do so, I'd still find it repulsive. God himself would have to threaten my loved ones to eternal hell for me to even think about (reluctantly) applying his sick plan.

But anyway, when are you going to change your label to Bible-believing Christian? Or is it Catholic Christian? Come on, you're not a deist ... just as you weren't just simply an open-minded agnostic before.
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#40
RE: The Immorality of God - The Canaanites
Athrock, why the continued need to rationalize/justify your belief to us? You're allowed to believe what ever you want, it's OK.

What are you really looking for?
Being told you're delusional does not necessarily mean you're mental. 
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