- Oct 15, 2019
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A familiarity with the work of Dr. Michael Heiser, Dr. Michael Heiser - Biblical Scholar | Author | Semitic Languages Expert, would help make sense of at least some of these verses in the context of the Jewish worldview of the time. For those who aren't familiar with his work, he is the author of the groundbreaking The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible. His work helps "make sense" of these verses in the sense of helping us understand the Jewish worldview and why these verses would have "made sense" to the Jews of the period.
Of course, the OP isn't really interested in our "opinions" on these verses. The point of the thread, as always, is: "You mindless Christians who want to pretend your God is perfect and holy and your Bible is perfect and holy can't explain this, can you?"
Well, no - at least some of it. As Paul Copan points out in books like Is God a Moral Monster? Making Sense of the Old Testament God, OT morality is in many respects quite enlightened in comparison to the morality of other cultures of the time. I can certainly rationalize that God may have had to deal with primitive people in a progressive manner and/or that some measures that seem pretty extreme and harsh may have been required to ensure the survival of the Jews and the fulfillment of God's plan for humanity.
But, as I've made clear in the thread "Critique of Cruelty In the Bible," such rationalizations aren't essential to my Christianity. OK, some of what the OT purports to be from God was actually not from God. It was a primitive peoples' attempt to hold their society together, magnify their own importance, and explain their history.
No big deal. This doesn't mean the Bible isn't the word of God, the Jews aren't God's chosen people, or Christianity isn't true. Only those who cling to a view of the Bible that I didn't share when I was a one-month newbie would really be seriously troubled by the verses cited in the OP - and even they can find rationalizations, unconvincing to others as some of them may be.
Of course, the OP isn't really interested in our "opinions" on these verses. The point of the thread, as always, is: "You mindless Christians who want to pretend your God is perfect and holy and your Bible is perfect and holy can't explain this, can you?"
Well, no - at least some of it. As Paul Copan points out in books like Is God a Moral Monster? Making Sense of the Old Testament God, OT morality is in many respects quite enlightened in comparison to the morality of other cultures of the time. I can certainly rationalize that God may have had to deal with primitive people in a progressive manner and/or that some measures that seem pretty extreme and harsh may have been required to ensure the survival of the Jews and the fulfillment of God's plan for humanity.
But, as I've made clear in the thread "Critique of Cruelty In the Bible," such rationalizations aren't essential to my Christianity. OK, some of what the OT purports to be from God was actually not from God. It was a primitive peoples' attempt to hold their society together, magnify their own importance, and explain their history.
No big deal. This doesn't mean the Bible isn't the word of God, the Jews aren't God's chosen people, or Christianity isn't true. Only those who cling to a view of the Bible that I didn't share when I was a one-month newbie would really be seriously troubled by the verses cited in the OP - and even they can find rationalizations, unconvincing to others as some of them may be.
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