You acted as if citing a common moral code found in multiple cultures and multiple religious texts is somehow supportive of the Bible simply because it is also found in the Bible. That is what is under contention.
I understand you thought that's what I said, but I never intended to say that. So, I'm going to ask you to choose from 2 options and then let's move on:
1) Caner is lying
2) I understand what Caner meant to say
Sorry, but all you are doing is making stuff up.
Are you asking me for a citation to support what I said?
There is absolutely no reason why the Hebrew people could not have taken the Amalekite children into their homes.
Have you ever taken a foreign child into your home? I have, and what I will say is that you have no idea what you're talking about.
Since you conceded abortion for this discussion, I don't have to. However, I will mention that I as I recall, the clinical definition of pain covers unborn children down to a certain age. I forget what age that is. Below that age they don't exhibit the clinical definition of pain. However, they do continue to exhibit a response to invasive material - a "protection mode" so to speak. Given your response that you do consider pain in other species and also consider their "stage of development", I'll again ask:
What is your basis for these judgements? Why can you dismiss pain in animals and kill them? Or dismiss the exhibited protective behavior in earlier stages of development?
People doing immoral things doesn't change the fact that morality exists. You keep acting as if people act immorally because they don't know what is moral. Can you explain this position?
I don't hold that position despite what you may have inferred. Regardless, as I understand psychology, it is rare (maybe even nonexistent) for someone to commit an act they are ready to acknowledge as immoral. Instead, they rationalize why it is acceptable for them to do it. That's the whole theme of the book
Crime and Punishment. It's a topic often discussed in the context of
film noir - that crime is not chaos, it's simply a different kind of order.
Can you show me where I made that argument?
You didn't. I was asking a question about how you justify killing unborn children. However, since you conceded that point for this discussion, we'll move on.
There is one deity under discussion in this thread that had no problem killing children.
From what statement of mine did you draw a conclusion that God has no problem with killing?
Then why didn't God change the situation if it would have saved lives?
Because as I explained, the result would have been worse (civil war that Saul would have lost ... indeed he did eventually lose). Rather than stopping with an answer to the immediate question, I think it prudent to answer the attendant question. If we continue down the chain: Why didn't God stop this? And that? And that? And that? We eventually require him to remove free will. It's simply the fact that he doesn't permanently remove free will because he implicitly promised that he wouldn't.
I assume that would lead to the question: Then why didn't God create a world where free will is possible but those immoral choices can't be made? That question creates a logical contradiction.
The next statement is then: So God is responsible for evil (the issue mentioned in the title of this thread). I will say he's not. You will say he is, and my explanation is unsatisfactory.
So, I'll just cut to the chase. Suppose God were responsible for evil. Then what?
In fact, we can see just the opposite with the story of the Exodus. God heartened the heart of the pharaoh so that he would not free Moses' people. Even though God took the pharaoh's free will, he still punished the entire nation by killing their first born. If you think killing unborn children is immoral, how immoral is that? ...
We have a track record of immoral acts for God that you are ignoring.
Again, based on what we've established, all you're saying is that you think these acts are immoral. Moving on to another example gives the impression you're conceding the Amalekite example. I don't think it's productive to leave this open-ended where you can continue to concede things and yet introduce example after example to try the same thing with a different story.
So I suggest we move on. You think God is evil. OK. So what does that mean?