Maybe our definition of objective is differing here.. In objective morals and duties I mean ones that don't change and aren't influenced by people or circumstances.
Objective means factually based, always true, and not Dependant on either circumstances or people, and so, without exception.
I'm not saying I'm perfect... I miss it sometimes just like everyone else.
Even if morality is objective and you are required to discern what it is, your morality is still subjective (relies upon subjective discernment).
Once you put people into the equation they are in it.
And I have't steeped my morals in my religion. That means that I've taken my morals and covered them with religion, but that's not true. My religion is the source of my morals, you see, so the objective morality that I believe in wouldn't be if I didn't believe what I believe. I only have these morals because of God. So no, religion doesn't add anything, because how can it when it was there all along? It is the foundation of what I believe to be objectively good and evil.
You know nothing of the sort. I don't believe in your religion and yet there are huge amounts of agreement we would have on basic morality.
And it's only genocide by your definition, so I'm not justifying genocide, I am justifying capital punishment. Which was right in those times, before Jesus paid the price with His life so I don't have to with mine.
Don't hide behind semantics, challenge my definition if you like but I am comfortable with it. When you go in and kill a tribe/group of people because your think your god orders you to it is genocide.
If you think that God actually ordered such an event then it is still genocide, just condoned by God, and you never answered my question about how we know (objectively) which actions are God ordained and which not.
The fact that you cower behind your religion instead of discussing this openly and directly is exactly what I am talking about here.
Killing isn't immoral. Murder is. Children are innocent because they don't know right from wrong, although we are all born selfish. And I believe that all of those children are in Heaven now, which is a much better life than they would have had if they had been kept by the Isrealites. It just seems that it would have turned out pretty badly for everyone involved if the children ever found out they were living with the people that killed all of their people.
All of those things are things you believe to make yourself feel better about genocide, any of them are of questionable factual nature.
Even the Bible specifically doesn't say anything about the children slaughtered here being in heaven. Many Christians believe exactly the opposite.
Again, not genocide. We do still live in that world. It is still that way all over the world. Just because it's not often seen in places like the U.S. doesn't mean that it isn't rather common. And now we have more efficient weapons, so why would clubs and the like still be utilized?
Evil being common doesn't make it right. I think it is less common today because we have demonstrated that there are better ways of doing things.
People who use machine guns today to do what the Israelites did are condemned by us.
Boko Haram - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"I abducted your girls. I will sell them in the market, by Allah. There is a market for selling humans. Allah says I should sell. He commands me to sell. I will sell women. I sell women,"
This guy isn't even killing every single person from among the unbelievers (he is just like the Israelites kidnapping women) and still is met with near universal disdain.
I think that the actions of the Israelites as told by the Bible would be genocide if it happened today, right in front of our eyes, and that is something you can't deal with.
I don't think it took over an eon for Christians to realize it, because that was the message of the people who wrote the Bible under God's direction, the FIRST Christians...
The first Christians were victims of power, thus it was easy for them to be virtuous. The question becomes what happens when they obtained power.
How did they treat people like me who disagree?
I take the radical view that how people act when they have the power to act is what defines their morality.