tcampen said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			Situational Morality is a reality of all morality, no matter who you are. Try to establish any particular act as always being "wrong" and there will be an exception to the rule, depending on the situation invovled. To get to the point where no reasonable exception can be found, the act has to be so narrowed down within a very particular situational context, that it itself becomes a prime example of situational morality in itself. 
 
For example, is it wrong to take another human life? Generally we say yes, but it really depends on the situation. More specifically, it is wrong without justification, such as self defense, which, arguably, would include many if not most lives taken in war. So we narrow it down to "murder" is wrong, with is the unlawful taking of a life, or killing without sufficient justification. Now we have to ask is it wrong to take some innocent life to save larger numbers of life? Look at the atoms bombs dropped on Japanese civilians at the end of WWII. That was the argument made.
 
Or does it matter who does the killing? Many religious moral "absolutists" claim an act is either right or wrong regardless of who does the act. But then bring up parts of the Bible where God takes the lives of innocent children, and they claim, but that's different because it's God doing the killing. If that's true, you've got another huge example of morality depending on the situation - namely who is doing the act.
 
See what I mean?
		
		
	 
But in monotheism this is not a creator god and and a destroyer god. There is only one god responsible for all. A monotheiestic god cannot just be held accountable for the death of the "millions?" of so-called "innocents" slaughtered as accounted in the stories of the Bible. He is ultimately responsible for the death of us all. His sovereignty implies this responsibility.
 
Everybody dies. If one maintains that a Higher Power, or a ultimate creator exists, then one must understand that that Higher Creative power created a world in which death exists. Does the thought of death negate the value of your life? In a sense, the question posed this way goes beyond the question of whether or not there is a God. There will be death regardless of what we believe.
 
If the concept of God becomes trivialized so that he becomes the  Joe-Sixpack warlord of a simple village, it may be possible to speak of the morality of God. But what kind of god would that be? ...hardly worth glorifying, in my opinion.
 
If however, one recognizes the value of their life as transcending the fact of their death, expressing gratitude just for the fact that one is alive is not an illogical attitude to hold.
 
With or without a god, the focus cannot be on avoiding death, but rather on fully living a life that is worth living. One need not look just to the pages of the Bible to understand that our survival and continuance as individuals and peoples has bee predicated upon our all-too-human, all-too-brutish natures. This fact has been written in our very genes.
 
For a Christian, to focus on the brutality of the message of the Bible to the exclusion of the deep sense of ethics and morality that is also present is an error, an heresy if you will in my own Catholic estimation. On the other hand, for us all as human beings, not to recognize the lessons of our own biology is an error as well. In the very act of living we are called upon to destroy. We must devour, and exert ourselves upon the world, or perish. That is not a fact of morality. It is a fact of natural reality.
 
While it is possible for pacifists to exist as sects within a larger society, it is very rare indeed for a tribe to actually survive following a strictly pacifist ideology. There are few examples. But as an example, take a look at a globe of northern Canada, if you have a moment. You may notice two lage lakes in the west Called Lesser Slave Lake, and Greater Slave Lake. These were named for the tribe of Indians indigeneous to the area, a very beautiful race of people from my own experience. However, Slaves were not the names they had for themselves; it was what the neighboring tribes of natives had for them.
 
In the atomic age, in the dark light of our own total annihilation, the problem of war and survival and morality has become a very thorny issue indeed.