hello all, I've a question.
I've discussed this with a christian before (one who directed me here), but was unsatisfied with the answer (I'll explain why later).
I was asking him if I had read the bible correctly when reading the story of the Exodus. it was the "hardening of the heart" of the Pharaoh that I was interested in. the pharaoh was ready to allow the israelites to go free, and then god "hardened the Pharaoh's heart and the heart of his officials." basically god made the pharaoh say no "in order that [god] may show these signs on [his] among them, and that [they] may tell [their] children and grandchildren how [god had] made fools of the Egyptians and what signs [he had] done among them." (Ex. 10.1)
this, of course, wasn't the only time this was done either. there is "hardening of hearts" (usually followed by a violent genocide) all over the old testament. after every each instance something horrendous happens by the hand of god, and usually to people whom most likely don't deserve it.
my main question is: how is it that the christian faith holds so dearly to the god of the old testament while at the same time uses phrases like "God is good" "God loves all his creation" and "God is just"? especially in light of the god of the old testament.
before you answer let me tell you what I've already heard, to avoid redundancy;
I've heard what most christians consider "hardening of the heart." that god took "his word" from pharaoh's conscience or something (anything of that matter). so to make pharaoh's action still his fault.
this doesn't really do it for me because it is still means god tampered with the pharaoh's "natural" choice-making abilities (like slipping a live shell into a gun meant to shoot blanks).
I've heard the whole "god works in mysterious ways" as well.
this doesn't work for me either simply because god VERY clearly explains his actions almost every instance this happens, and it's always to show people that he is god.
I've even heard that these instances shouldn't matter given that the children who were killed (thousands) by god's death-angel/ iraelites were in heaven.
I find no support for this anywhere in the old testament, and it doesn't matter anyway. they were killed, not converted, not banished from the land, KILLED BY THE SWORD. man, woman, old, and young-- dead.
so, someone tell me HOW god, in these instances, is even remotely good, just, or loving of his creation?
I hope I put this in the right forum, and that it made sense (written quickly at work).
I've discussed this with a christian before (one who directed me here), but was unsatisfied with the answer (I'll explain why later).
I was asking him if I had read the bible correctly when reading the story of the Exodus. it was the "hardening of the heart" of the Pharaoh that I was interested in. the pharaoh was ready to allow the israelites to go free, and then god "hardened the Pharaoh's heart and the heart of his officials." basically god made the pharaoh say no "in order that [god] may show these signs on [his] among them, and that [they] may tell [their] children and grandchildren how [god had] made fools of the Egyptians and what signs [he had] done among them." (Ex. 10.1)
this, of course, wasn't the only time this was done either. there is "hardening of hearts" (usually followed by a violent genocide) all over the old testament. after every each instance something horrendous happens by the hand of god, and usually to people whom most likely don't deserve it.
my main question is: how is it that the christian faith holds so dearly to the god of the old testament while at the same time uses phrases like "God is good" "God loves all his creation" and "God is just"? especially in light of the god of the old testament.
before you answer let me tell you what I've already heard, to avoid redundancy;
I've heard what most christians consider "hardening of the heart." that god took "his word" from pharaoh's conscience or something (anything of that matter). so to make pharaoh's action still his fault.
this doesn't really do it for me because it is still means god tampered with the pharaoh's "natural" choice-making abilities (like slipping a live shell into a gun meant to shoot blanks).
I've heard the whole "god works in mysterious ways" as well.
this doesn't work for me either simply because god VERY clearly explains his actions almost every instance this happens, and it's always to show people that he is god.
I've even heard that these instances shouldn't matter given that the children who were killed (thousands) by god's death-angel/ iraelites were in heaven.
I find no support for this anywhere in the old testament, and it doesn't matter anyway. they were killed, not converted, not banished from the land, KILLED BY THE SWORD. man, woman, old, and young-- dead.
so, someone tell me HOW god, in these instances, is even remotely good, just, or loving of his creation?
I hope I put this in the right forum, and that it made sense (written quickly at work).