- Nov 13, 2017
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ISIS makes the same arguments about the infidels and the "West". We, in the West, worship our false god (i.e. Jesus) and other idols. We murder our children (abortion), and treat our women poorly (e.g. pornography). We are morally impure (from the perspective of ISIS). Thus do we, as non-ISIS members, deserve to die? Did the untold Syrians who are deemed "evil" by ISIS deserve to die?
Are ISIS as justified in their beliefs as the ancient Israelites were in theirs?
Your argument seems to suggest that the Amalekites deserved to die simply because they did some bad stuff and worshipped the wrong god. You are literally making the same argument as ISIS. Is this not an evil position?
I think there’s a difference in the overall intent, i.e ISIS is/was intent on taking over large areas of territory and imposing a harsh rule of sharia law, interpreted very severely. Abraham left what was then a well populated fertile flood plain in Mesopotamia for the comparative dust bowl of Canaan to begin a new people, through all the ups and downs the instances where Israel is the unprovoked aggressor are few. The intent was not to impose rule, but to set up what was for the time an idealised society which would serve as ‘a light to the nations’, which other people could join, but were not forced to, nor were they subjugated by Israel. I’m not sure what the Amalekites did exactly that made them stand out as especially dangerous, as an influence, but as I understand it there was a gradual process by which they ‘filled up the full measure of their wickedness’ and could no longer be tolerated. God tells us that he is a jealous God, and he has at times, usually after a period of time to allow for repentance, resorted to extreme measures to protect the people who carry his name - without whom no-one would have any possibility of salvation.
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