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The Canaanites: Genocide or Judgment? Is God’s perfect character compromised by their slaughter?
Stand To Reason ^ | 07/27/2019 | Greg Koukl

Posted on 07/27/2019 8:07:08 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

Is God’s perfect character compromised by the genocide of the Canaanites in the Old Testament? Is God good?

The assault on theism by the so-called “New Atheists” has principally focused on three areas. People like Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, and Daniel Dennett have argued, broadly, that reason is on their side, science is on their side, and morality is on their side.[1]

One justification for the atheists’ claim to high moral ground is what seems to them to be the patently immoral conduct of the God of the Old Testament. According to Richard Dawkins, for example, God is not only a delusion, but a “pernicious delusion”:

The God of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty, ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully.[2]

As an aside, it seems ironic that an atheist who denies the existence of objective morality can overflow so readily with moral indignation. But that’s another matter. The deeper concern is that this challenge needs an answer, not so much for hardened atheists like Dawkins (who are unlikely to be satisfied with any explanation), but because atheists are not the only ones troubled.


Say It Ain’t So

Though many parts of Dawkins’s charge have been answered by thoughtful Christians, certain passages in the Old Testament even give believers pause. Like these:

When the Lord your God brings you into the land where you are entering to possess it, and clears away many nations before you…you shall utterly destroy them. You shall make no covenant with them and show no favor to them. Furthermore, you shall not intermarry with them…. For they will turn your sons away from following Me to serve other gods. Then the anger of the Lord will be kindled against you and He will quickly destroy you. But thus you shall do to them: You shall tear down their altars, and smash their sacred pillars, and hew down their Asherim, and burn their graven images with fire. (Deut. 7:1–5)[3]

Only in the cities of these peoples that the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance, you shall not leave alive anything that breathes. But you shall utterly destroy them, the Hittite and the Amorite, the Canaanite and the Perizzite, the Hivite and the Jebusite, as the Lord your God has commanded you, so that they may not teach you to do according to all their detestable things which they have done for their gods, so that you would sin against the Lord your God. (Deut. 20.16–18)

Now go, attack the Amalekites and totally destroy everything that belongs to them. Do not spare them; put to death men and women, children and infants, cattle and sheep, camels and donkeys.’” (1 Sam 15:2–3)

Strong words. Reading them brings to mind horrible terms like “genocide” or “ethnic cleansing.” Could this command really come from the God of all grace and mercy, the same God who, in the person of Jesus of Nazareth, “became flesh, and dwelt among us…full of grace and truth” (Jn. 1:14)?

Maybe not, according to some.


But Did He Mean It?

Authors like philosopher Paul Copan (Is God a Moral Monster?) have argued, somewhat persuasively, that taking these commands entirely at face value would be to misread the genre. God gave the directives, to be sure (the Jews hadn’t thought this up on their own), but one must accurately understand God’s intention before he can accurately assess God’s commands.

First, the wording should be understood in the context of ancient Near Eastern military narrative, the argument goes. Ancient writings commonly traded in hyperbole—exaggeration for the sake of emphasis—especially when it came to military conquest. The practice is evident throughout battle reports of the time. “Joshua’s conventional warfare rhetoric,” Copan writes, “was common in many other ancient Near Eastern military accounts in the second and first millennia B.C.” [4]

Therefore, phrases like “utterly destroy” (haram), or “put to death men and women, children, and infants”—as well as other “obliteration language”—were stock “stereotypical” idioms used even when women or children were not present.[5] It decreed total victory (much like your favorite sports team “wiping out” the opposition), not complete annihilation.[6]

Second, Copan argues, women and children probably weren’t targets since the attacks were directed at smaller military outposts characteristically holding soldiers, not noncombatants (who generally lived in outlying rural areas). “All the archaeological evidence indicates that no civilian populations existed at Jericho, Ai, and other cities mentioned in Joshua.”[7]

Third, on Copan’s view the main purpose of the conquest was not annihilation, but expulsion—driving the inhabitants out—and cleansing the land of idolatry by destroying every vestige of the evil Canaanite religion[8] (e.g., “You shall tear down their altars, and smash their sacred pillars, and hew down their Asherim, and burn their graven images with fire.” Deut. 7:1–5). Further, this process would be gradual, taking place over time: “The Lord your God will clear away these nations before you little by little. You will not be able to put an end to them quickly, for the wild beasts would grow too numerous for you” (Deut. 7:22).

Finally, the record shows that Joshua fully obeyed the Lord’s command:

Thus Joshua struck all the land, the hill country and the Negev and the lowland and the slopes and all their kings. He left no survivor, but he utterly destroyed all who breathed, just as the Lord, the God of Israel, had commanded…. He left nothing undone of all that the Lord had commanded Moses. (Josh. 10:40, 11:15)

Still, at the end of Joshua’s life it was clear that many Canaanites continued to live in the land, left to be driven out gradually by the next generation (Josh. 23:12–13, Judges 1:21, 27–28). According to Copan, if Joshua did all that was expected of him, yet multitudes of Canaanites remained alive, then clearly the command to destroy all who breathed was not to be taken literally, but hyperbolically.

If these arguments go through—if God did not command the utter and indiscriminate destruction of men, women, and children by Joshua’s armies, but simply authorized an appropriate cleansing military action to drive out Israel’s (and God’s) enemies—then the critic’s challenge is largely resolved, it seems.

It’s quite possible, then—at least according to some thoughtful observers—that the “genocide” charge is based on an inaccurate understanding of what the text actually means. But not everyone agrees.


Yes, God Meant It

Researchers like Clay Jones see it differently.[9] He understands these passages principally in terms of judgment, not displacement. Even if some hyperbolic and stereotypical language is in evidence, still there’s no escaping the implications that a major incentive for the conquest was judgment. Note:

“It is because of the wickedness of these nations that the Lord your God is driving them out before you…” (Deut. 9:5)

“Do not defile yourselves by any of these things, for by all these the nations which I am casting out before you have become defiled.” (Lev. 18:24–25)

“When you enter the land which the Lord your God gives you, you shall not learn to imitate the detestable things of those nations…because of these detestable things the Lord your God will drive them out before you.” (Deut. 18:9, 12)

God was angry. Indeed, He was furious. And with good reason. Even by ancient standards, the Canaanites were a hideously nasty bunch. Their culture was grossly immoral, decadent to its roots. Its debauchery was dictated primarily by its fertility religion that tied eroticism of all varieties to the successful agrarian cycles of planting and harvest.

In addition to divination, witchcraft, and female and male temple sex, Canaanite idolatry encompassed a host of morally disgusting practices that mimicked the sexually perverse conduct of their Canaanite fertility gods: adultery, homosexuality, transvestitism, pederasty (men sexually abusing boys), sex with all sorts of beasts,[10] and incest. Note that after the Canaanite city Sodom was destroyed, Lot’s daughters immediately seduced their drunken father, imitating one of the sexual practices of the city just annihilated (Gen. 19:30–36).

Worst of all, Canaanites practiced child sacrifice. There was a reason God had commanded, “Do not give any of your children to be sacrificed to Molech” (Lev. 18:21 NIV):

Molech was a Canaanite underworld deity represented as an upright, bull-headed idol with human body in whose belly a fire was stoked and in whose outstretched arms a child was placed that would be burned to death….And it was not just infants; children as old as four were sacrificed.”[11]

And:

A bronze image of Kronos was set up among them, stretching out its cupped hands above a bronze cauldron, which would burn the child. As the flame burning the child surrounded the body, the limbs would shrivel up and the mouth would appear to grin as if laughing, until it was shrunk enough to slip into the cauldron.[12]

Archaeological evidence indicates that the children thus burned to death sometimes numbered in the thousands.[13]

The Canaanites had been reveling in debasements like these for centuries as God patiently postponed judgment (Gen 15.16). Here was no “petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty, ethnic cleanser” (to use Dawkins’s words). Instead, here was a God willing to spare the Canaanite city of Sodom for the sake of just ten righteous people (Gen. 18:32), a God who was slow to anger and always fast to forgive (note Nineveh, for example).

But is there not a limit? Indeed, what would we say of a God who perpetually sat silent in the face of such wickedness? Would we not ask, Where was God? Would we not question His goodness, His power, or even His existence if He did not eventually vanquish this evil? Yet when God finally does act, we are quick to find fault with the “vindictive, bloodthirsty, ethnic cleanser.”

The conquest was neither ethnic cleansing nor genocide. God cared nothing about skin color or national origin. Aliens shared the same legal rights in the commonwealth as Jews (Lev. 19:34, Lev. 24:22, Deut. 10:18–19). Foreigners like Naomi and Rahab were welcome within their ranks.

God cared only about sin. The conquest was an exercise of capital punishment on a national scale, payback for hundreds of years of idolatry and unthinkable debauchery.[14] Indeed, God brought the same sentence of destruction on His own people when they sinned in like manner.


Cleaning House

In the process of executing His sentence against the Canaanites, God would be cleansing the land of every vestige of their debased religion (e.g., tearing down the high places) to establish a land of spiritual purity and religious truth so God’s strategy to save all the nations of the world could go forward (Gen. 12:3).

God’s rescue plan to save mankind depended on the theological purity of Abraham’s seed, Israel. The cancer of idolatry needed to be cut out for the patient—God’s plan of redemption—to survive. Syncretism with pagan religions would have corrupted Israel’s theological core. By purging the land of this evil, God ensured that redemption—forgiveness for the evils of any nation—would be available in the future for people of every nation.

Unfortunately, instead of completing the conquest of Canaan and driving its people out as commanded, the Jews capitulated (Judg. 1:28–33). Blending in with their enemy’s godless culture, they quickly were corrupted by it:

The sons of Israel lived among the Canaanites…took their daughters for themselves as wives, and gave their own daughters to their sons, and served their gods. The sons of Israel did what was evil in the sight of the Lord, and forgot the Lord their God and served the Baals and the Asheroth. (Judg. 3:5–7)

Before long the Jews had adopted all the degrading and detestable habits God had condemned Canaan for in the first place.[15] The book of Judges—a record of the “Canaanization” of Israel—ends on this sinister note: “In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes” (Judg. 21:25). Eventually, the same judgment that fell on the debauched Canaanites, fell upon the corrupted Jews for the very same reasons.

Many balk, though, at the suggestion that non-combatants—women and children—were among the victims. This is partly because they assume the conquest was primarily a military action—combat. It was not. It was principally a sentence of judgment, with the punishment carried out by Israel’s army against the entire Canaanite people.

Characteristically, God deals not with individuals, but with nations as a whole when grand designs are in play. Since Canaanite sin was regular and systematic—the entire adult population participated in the idolatrous system—God judged the entire nation. Women were no less guilty than men, and in many cases they were the principal instigators.

When a community sins, there are consequences for every member of the population, even children. When Israel did evil and God brought famine and drought, adults and children suffered alike. Every act of corporate judgment sustains collateral damage.

Without question, the Canaanite adults got their just deserts. Regarding the children, I personally take comfort in the fact that, on my view, those who die before the age of accountability are ushered immediately into Heaven.[16]

But there is another reason God seems justified in taking any life—even “innocent” life—anytime He wants.


Two Questions

It’s always a good idea when fielding any challenge to try to get specific about the specifics. What exactly is the skeptic’s complaint here? If the conquest took place as the narrative describes, what precisely is evil about the destruction of the Canaanites? Was it evil for God to command it, or was it evil for Israel to obey it?[17]

It certainly seems that if God does exist, and if He were to have morally sufficient reasons for decreeing the destruction of a group of people, then the means by which he carries it out would be somewhat inconsequential. Whether God chose famine, wild beasts, pestilence, or sword (Ezek. 14:12–23), if the authority to destroy is there, then the means of judgment is incidental. Thus, if it was right for God to command the conquest, it seems right for Israel to obey the command.

But was God right? I’ve already shown that if God needed morally sufficient reasons for killing the Canaanites, he had them in abundance. However, if God is God, does He even need to justify what He does with His creation? Does God need to give a reason to build up or to tear down, to plant or to uproot? (Jer. 45:4) Does God need to answer for taking the life of any person, even an innocent one?

When Job lost everything dear to him, he did not rail against God, but worshipped Him saying, “Naked I came from my mother's womb, and naked I shall return there. The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away. Blessed be the name of the Lord” (Job 1:21). Reflecting on the sovereignty of God, the Apostle Paul asked, “Does not the potter have a right over the clay?” (Rom. 9:21)

If this approach seems a bit severe, let me make an observation.

When people argue against capital punishment, they often form their appeal this way: “Capital punishment is wrong because man should not play God.” The same sensibility is reflected when people argue that cloning is suspect because the right to create life is God’s alone, not man’s.

I don’t think these arguments themselves ultimately succeed (that is, the morality of either capital punishment or cloning must be decided on other grounds). Still, I think the intuitions they trade on are sound.

Making life and taking life are the appropriate prerogatives of God. He has privileges that we do not. Though we shouldn’t play God, certainly God can play God, so to speak. Just as the owner has latitude the hired hand does not, the Creator has freedoms creatures do not share.

That’s part of what we mean when we say God is “sovereign.” The Maker has complete authority over what He has made—not simply in virtue of His power (omnipotence), but in virtue of His rightful ownership. Everything God created is His. He can do as He likes with anything that belongs to Him—which is everything.

Appealing to the sovereignty of God is not meant to silence opposition with a power move (How dare you question God!). Rather, it’s meant to put the issue in proper perspective. God has full and appropriate authority when it comes to issues of life and death. Being the Author of life, He has the absolute right to give life or to take life away whenever He wishes.


The Heart of the Problem

Put another way, God is God and we are not. He is not to be measured by our standards. Rather, we are to be measured by His. And that brings us to the root of our difficulty with God’s judgment of the Canaanites. The heart of the problem is the heart, ours.

In a certain sense, the lesson of the conquest is a simple one: God punishes evil. For many in our culture, though, the Canaanite offenses simply are not offensive. “Divination, sexual adventure, adultery, homosexuality, transvestitism, all evil? Please.”

Virtually every crime on the Canaanite rap sheet is common fare in our communities or can be found one click away on the internet. Children are not being torched on church altars, to be sure, but thousands die daily in abortion clinics sacrificed (literally) to the gods of choice and convenience.

There’s little doubt the wording in God’s commands regarding the conquest includes hyperbole. This is true of every narrative, ancient and modern. But literary devices are always meant to clarify meaning, not obscure it. God’s clear message was that punishment was coming, and it would be poured out with a fury upon all the inhabitants of a corrupt nation that had reveled in its debauchery for centuries.

This was not carte blanche for genocide or ethnic cleansing, but rather a directive limited in time to the conquest, limited in scope to the Canaanites, and limited in location to the Promised Land.

Yes, Joshua claimed he “finished” the job, though Canaanites remained. In light of all the details in the account, though, clearly the conquest wasn’t complete, only Joshua’s portion. He’d been completely faithful to do everything he could do on his watch (and here I think Joshua was using hyperbole, too). He then passed the baton to the next generation who was to follow his faithful example and finish the task.

In the process of judging, God would be cleansing, clearing out a safe place for truth to flourish so that Israel might rise up as a “kingdom of priests” to the nations, bringing the blessing of Abraham to all peoples—Jew and gentile alike.

It may turn out, though, that this explanation—or any explanation true to the text—is not going to satisfy the belligerent skeptic. People like Richard Dawkins and other critics “playing at omniscience”[18] are simply ignorant of the deeper designs in play.

Further, since we’ve all been “morally velocitized” by our own depravity, any response by God that takes sin seriously will seem inordinate to us. In fact, the temptation is strong even for Christians to sanitize the account so that God looks less extreme. “Most of our problems regarding God’s ordering the destruction of the Canaanites,” Clay Jones writes, “come from the fact that God hates sin, but we do not.”[19]

Atheists read the account of Canaan’s conquest and sniff with moral indignation at the suggestion a holy God could be within His rights to destroy the Canaanite people along with their culture. I suspect, though, that Jones has a more accurate assessment:

We do not appreciate the depths of our own depravity, the horror of sin, and the righteousness of God. Consequently, it is no surprise that when we see God’s judgment upon those who committed the sins we commit, that complaint and protest arises within our hearts.[20]



TOPICS: Apologetics; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture; Theology
KEYWORDS: canaanites; genocide; oldtestament
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To: Safrguns
Hardly any Christians are taught about these times and it is so important to understand God and prophesy. In Genesis 6:1,fallen angels mate with human women and produce Nephilim. Most Seminaries teach it was sons of Seth, but how does humans mating with humans make monsters 13 ft tall? Sons of God are angels. The Nephilim Corrupted the seed of the woman mentioned in the Genesis 3 "seed war" leaving God without a path to produce Jesus to fight Satan in the Final Battle in the Last Days. Noah was perfect in his generations so he and family were saved and the rest of anything living was killed in the Flood. The DNA corruption was somewhere in Noah's family, probably in Ham or his spouse because they were cursed in the line of Canaan. Nimrod was the first Nephilim mentioned after the Flood.(Septuagint)The devil knew the prophesy that Israel would spend 430 years in Egypt and Canaan settled in the "Promised Land" to secure it and grow powerful. God told His people, like Saul to kill "everything with breath" in certain towns. I believe it's in Deuteronomy or Numbers (not sure which), where God made a distinction on which cities would just be destroyed and the ones that would be completely wiped out including women, children, horses, cattle, dogs, and cats. These certain cities had Nephilim DNA mixed into the population. Even animals were corrupted by editing DNA.(possibly dinosaurs because they weren't invited on the Ark during the Flood.)God chose what animals got on the Ark. Saul was told to kill all of the people in a kingdom yet he kept the king for ransom, kept the women for you know what, and why kill a good horse and cattle? God hated it so much, Saul was no longer king and David was raised up in his place.

It's all there in the Old Testament, we just read over it and miss the plan of God. The demonic angels corrupted the seed of the women and God killed them, all of them. IMO, the "seed" is still floating around in certain people. Study the line of Esau and the Edomites. God hates them and has cursed them. Rome was founded by a branch of Edomites. The Antichrist will come from the old Assyrian empire ( you can figure it out from Daniel and a few other scattered verses that takes an hour to get through, and the pope with be his false prophet).

When you hear someone say God is cruel in the OT, remind them That God never changes. It the same God that gave His Son for His people. God's people were chosen in Malachi when He said Jacob (Israel) I have loved, Esau I have hated. The religion of Old Assyria is mostly Islam.

Now having said all this, Jesus told us that He would return " as it was in the days of Noah, and "as it was in the days of Lot". You can guess what the days of Lot is speaking of, but you get 15 answers about the day of Noah. It was speaking of editing DNA, along with evil such as killing babies, making Chimera's like pigs with human hearts. Stem cell research from abortion, and 15 other things we are doing today, like designer babies and even crossing apes and humans. God created man and looked at what He created and said "It was good". What the demons did was corrupt His creation.

In Romans 1, Paul speaks of us not acknowledging God as Creator so He turned them over to a reprobate, or debased mind. The first sign of this reprobate mind is the woman changed the natural use of their body and the man does the same. Thinking themselves wise, they became fools. This is why evolution was demonic and homosexuality has grown exponentially since. Because we won't accept the Bible as written, we try to fit scientific theories into the Biblical stories.

The Word of God is either true or it isn't. God can either speak something into existence or He can't. We are told there is nothing too hard for God, but then we start mixing billions of years into Genesis. God calls this unbelief. You can't please God without faith.

These people that say God is a genocidal maniac just don't understand that He is killing evil people. The SJW people believe everyone is the same. They are not. God spent most of the Bible electing and separating His people out of the world. As a Gentile, our job is to be adopted into Israel as Manasseh and Ephraim were. The only way to do that is to accept the Blood of Jesus to be saved. Joseph was a type and shadow of Jesus and married a Gentile bride from Egypt (the world).

21 posted on 07/27/2019 11:25:16 PM PDT by chuckles
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To: Safrguns
Now go, attack the Amalekites and totally destroy everything that belongs to them. Do not spare them; put to death men and women, children and infants, cattle and sheep, camels and donkeys.’” (1 Sam 15:2–3)

I believe you about hit the nail on the head. I think it was just another outbreak of the Nephilim. I believe the reason for Noah’s Flood, was primarily to wipe out the Nephilim. I have heard some say the Amalekites, were some sort of vampire like hybrids, from which the vampire movies are based on.
I don’t know for sure, but it’s interesting.

22 posted on 07/28/2019 1:06:37 AM PDT by Mark17 (With Jesus, there is more wealth in my soul, than acres of diamonds and mountains of gold.)
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To: MHGinTN; Roman_War_Criminal; melsec

Meant to ping you to 22.


23 posted on 07/28/2019 1:08:23 AM PDT by Mark17 (With Jesus, there is more wealth in my soul, than acres of diamonds and mountains of gold.)
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To: Safrguns; MHGinTN; metmom; melsec; Roman_War_Criminal
Some of these hybrids did survive the flood somehow, and there is debate about how that was possible. (some suggest the wives that were taken by Noah’s sons)

There is another possibility. Maybe all the Nephilim were indeed, killed in the Flood, their carcasses strewn across the world. God works miracles. Fallen angels use technology. So called “alien abductions,” have been happening for thousands of years. They are NOT aliens. They are fallen angels, harvesting eggs and sperm, to genetically manipulate into new Nephilim. I believe they are already here, as in the days of Noah. Am I dogmatic on this? No, but that’s what I think. 😁 By the way, don’t let the black eyed children into your house. They might be Nephilim. 👎

24 posted on 07/28/2019 1:35:28 AM PDT by Mark17 (With Jesus, there is more wealth in my soul, than acres of diamonds and mountains of gold.)
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To: Safrguns; MHGinTN; metmom; melsec; Roman_War_Criminal; chuckles
Speaking of the bodies of dead Nephilim, being strewn across the landscape, and being physically and visibly seen, check this out. It might rock your world. 👍
25 posted on 07/28/2019 1:56:02 AM PDT by Mark17 (With Jesus, there is more wealth in my soul, than acres of diamonds and mountains of gold.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Atheists read the account of Canaan’s conquest and sniff with moral indignation at the suggestion a holy God could be within His rights to destroy the Canaanite people along with their culture. :

Based on what moral code? Where did that come from then?

26 posted on 07/28/2019 3:07:40 AM PDT by moose07 (DMCS (Dit Me Cong San ) Life really does begin at forty. Until then, you are just doing research.)
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To: aquila48

GMO and total destruction by God go hand in hand.


27 posted on 07/28/2019 4:04:31 AM PDT by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: aquila48
Also total planetary destruction at God's hand because of GMO organisms sounds familiar.


28 posted on 07/28/2019 4:12:13 AM PDT by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: grumpygresh

29 posted on 07/28/2019 4:18:17 AM PDT by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: SeekAndFind

“Could this command really come from the God of all grace and mercy, the same God who, in the person of Jesus of Nazareth, “became flesh, and dwelt among us…full of grace and truth” (Jn. 1:14)?

This is the God who sent the Noahic Flood, and only spared 8 souls alive. When the post flood nations became corrupt AGAIN, He ordered the Jews to clean house.


30 posted on 07/28/2019 4:48:46 AM PDT by Tucker39 ("It is impossible to rightly govern a nation without God and the Bible." George Washington)
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To: SeekAndFind

“Could this command really come from the God of all grace and mercy, the same God who, in the person of Jesus of Nazareth, “became flesh, and dwelt among us…full of grace and truth” (Jn. 1:14)?

This is the God who sent the Noahic Flood, and only spared 8 souls alive. When the post flood nations became corrupt AGAIN, He ordered the Jews to clean house.


31 posted on 07/28/2019 5:42:42 AM PDT by Tucker39 ("It is impossible to rightly govern a nation without God and the Bible." George Washington)
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To: SeekAndFind

May I also mention that the Lord Jesus warned more about Hell for those who reject Salvation, than He talked about grace and peace. Actually, the only way to have real grace, peace and eternal assurance is to surrender one’s will to Him and have His indwelling Presence always abiding in us.


32 posted on 07/28/2019 5:49:08 AM PDT by Tucker39 ("It is impossible to rightly govern a nation without God and the Bible." George Washington)
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To: SeekAndFind
People like Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, and Daniel Dennett have argued, broadly, that reason is on their side, science is on their side, and morality is on their side.

So that's why they're always insulting and scolding wiccans and "indigenous pipples!" Oh . . . wait.

Why can't people simply accept that G-d decides what is right and what is wrong, and nothing and no one else does?

33 posted on 07/28/2019 6:05:15 AM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (Modernism began two thousand years ago.)
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To: SeekAndFind

I suppose you could put the argument in terms of today.

Suppose people found out Epsteins pedo island was a religious cult, then how would people feel?

Do they really favor sex slavery of women and children for religious reason?

Do they support ritual religious abuse and murder?

If they say no, they’ve done away with their own case against God.


34 posted on 07/28/2019 6:28:30 AM PDT by metmom ( ...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: SeekAndFind

The Canaanites, who got a 400 year reprieve from the time of Abraham to Moses, were originally going to be driven out with hornets. All the Hebrews had to do was go in and possess the land.
They balked, so died in the desert, and their children had to go in and fight for the land, which they did.
Then they started making peace treaties with the Canaanites, and soon were taking their daughters, and giving their own daughters to the Canaanites to wed, and started worshiping the Canaanite gods, offering their own children as sacrifices...and a downward spiral of Israel began.


35 posted on 07/28/2019 6:44:11 AM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar
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To: chuckles

Well and truly written.


36 posted on 07/28/2019 6:57:54 AM PDT by MHGinTN (A dispensation perspective is a powerful tool for discernment)
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To: Some Fat Guy in L.A.

You missed the mark there, dude. God did not make the Nephilim, fallen angels did.


37 posted on 07/28/2019 7:36:36 AM PDT by MHGinTN (A dispensation perspective is a powerful tool for discernment)
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To: SeekAndFind

I read very little of it because these stupid people who
call them selves athiests will say that there is no God
from one side of their lieing mouth and from the other side
say how cruel God is, which makes no sense at all.

It is not even worth a comment but I am human.


38 posted on 07/28/2019 9:03:31 AM PDT by ravenwolf
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To: Safrguns

With the genetic manipulation we’ve been seeing today, the Nephillum do not need to return as they did before.

Man will create genetically corrupted humans.


39 posted on 07/28/2019 9:45:53 AM PDT by metmom ( ...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: Mark17

For later...

Thanks!


40 posted on 07/28/2019 10:28:15 AM PDT by Roman_War_Criminal (Like Enoch, Noah, & Lot, the True Church will soon be removed & then destruction comes forth.)
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