Daedalus said:
PS139
God has all the rights; killing is not bad if God does it -- in his infinite wisdom He does it with a pourpose.
That is the argument - God cannot do anything bad - anything He does is righteous, even if we do not understand it.
That statement, in itself, I believe to be true.
But some actions ascribed to God in the OT - I do not believe to be true.
For instance, can God hate? No! He is a God of love! He loves every one of His creations. Can God "righteously hate"? No! That is a contradiction in terms. Well then, what about these verses from Malachi 1:
Jacob Loved, Esau Hated
2 "I have loved you," says the LORD .
"But you ask, 'How have you loved us?'
"Was not Esau Jacob's brother?" the LORD says. "Yet I have loved Jacob, 3 but
Esau I have hated, and I have turned his mountains into a wasteland and left his inheritance to the desert jackals."
4 Edom may say, "Though we have been crushed, we will rebuild the ruins."
But this is what the LORD Almighty says: "They may build, but I will demolish. They will be called the Wicked Land, a people always under the wrath of the LORD .
Does God hate Esau? No. God cannot hate. Otherwise he would not be God. Its like saying "can God sin" - no, otherwise he would not be God.
Whats the solution?
Hebraicisms such as these in the OT are not to be taken at face value - God does not hate Esau.
I am not saying that the entire OT is a huge myth and nothing happened - I am far from that opinion - I believe in a literal worldwide Flood, in a literal Adam & Eve - but the wording of Hebrew, the expressions used.....literally translated and taken literally can be dangerous, we do not think or speak like the Hebrews - and we need to be careful when reading the OT, and not taking every action ascribed to God as objective truth.