I do not need to reply this ignorant post. But, ...
The genocide case is: Ancient Israelites obeyed their God, 4000 years ago.
In my understanding, that was the only case justified. It is an example which illustrates what moral really is.
No. It's an example that illustrates that "divine command theory" is the opposite of morality. It's the "morality" of psychopaths.
It's no more then obedience to a perceived authority.
If your god says "kill", then killing is "moral".
If your god says "keep slaves", then slavery is "moral".
If your god says "kill all humans", then killing all humans is "moral".
You have NO moral compass. All you have is obedience to a perceived authority.
The analogy can be found in classrooms of 10 year olds.
Consider the rule that children may not drink during classes. On a hot day the teacher might give permission to drink water during class. When you ask a child of that class if it is ok to drink water if the teacher says so, they will say "yes, no problem".
Now consider a teacher that tells the children that it is ok to punch their fellow class members in the face. When you then ask the kids if it is ok to do so because the teacher gave permission, only those kids who have psychopathic tendencies will say "yes, no problem".
And that is exacty the group you belong to. Your god is your perceived authority. And you blindly swallow whatever you believe this god commands.
He could command the most immoral, disgusting things and you'ld be ok with it. Because you are morally bankrupt. You have sacrificed your moral integrity in favor of obedience to a perceived authority. You have traded your moral compass for the "morality" of psychopaths.
And the proof is in the pudding... you're here, flat out stating that genocide is a-okay as long as your perceived authority commands it.
I wonder what will happen the day you become convinced that god is telling you to go out and commit some kind of horrible deed. Like that woman who drowned her 3 kid because she believed god commanded her to. Frightening, really...
I wouldn't want to have you as a neighbour.