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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: kland]
#132194
03/30/11 01:52 PM
03/30/11 01:52 PM
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Notice the context for this statement. It is in terms of "commanding." It is not in terms of what God may or may not choose to do in terms of actions against sinners who have passed the threshold of His patience.
Would you prefer, "coerced"? kland, Do you call it "coerced" when a parent disciplines a child? Is it "coerced" when someone is sentenced to capital punishment? We are all already thus sentenced, as sinners. We are not, however, "coerced," as we have the option of choosing to accept Christ's free offer of salvation. It is optional. That is the point. If we do not choose life, however, God will destroy us. The destruction, having been avoidable, cannot properly be called either "force" or "coercion." Blessings, Green Cochoa.
We can receive of heaven's light only as we are willing to be emptied of self. We can discern the character of God, and accept Christ by faith, only as we consent to the bringing into captivity of every thought to the obedience of Christ. And to all who do this, the Holy Spirit is given without measure. In Christ "dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are complete in Him." [Colossians 2:9, 10.] {GW 57.1} -- Ellen White.
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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: Green Cochoa]
#132195
03/30/11 02:12 PM
03/30/11 02:12 PM
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Green - The quote of EGW is life and character. What Tom said above is this:So the principle that all that we need to know of God, or can know of God, was revealed in the life and character of His Son during His earthly ministry is false. So I think you need to clarify what you mean by a subtle change of "character" to "ministry". Also, John 14:9 was speaking specifically of his life that Philip was seeing. My vote is still with how Tom has interpreted EGW's statement.False? Really? All that man needs to know or can know of God has been revealed in the life and character of His Son. {8T 286.1} John 14:9 AKJV Jesus said to him, Have I been so long time with you, and yet have you not known me, Philip? he that has seen me has seen the Father; and how say you then, Show us the Father? And who did Abraham see? When did Jesus become "alive?" Did He truly live only 33 years? You see, the subtle switch here is from the word "character" to "ministry," implying only those 3.5 years of Jesus' principal work while incarnate upon this earth. That is what invalidates the "inspiration" of Tom's statement, and which has no backing in Mrs. White's writings nor those of the Bible. If you can find one single statement from Mrs. White where she says what Tom said, then I might adjust my own view on this matter. Until then, I am careful to understand what she expressly said, and not what someone else thinks she said or should have said instead. God bless, Green Cochoa.
Oh, that men might open their minds to know God as he is revealed in his Son! {ST, January 20, 1890}
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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: kland]
#132196
03/30/11 02:31 PM
03/30/11 02:31 PM
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Notice the context for this statement. It is in terms of "commanding." It is not in terms of what God may or may not choose to do in terms of actions against sinners who have passed the threshold of His patience. So is the main problem with sin is that God runs out of patience, and then has to use force to execute judgment? Are the wages of sin execution by God, or does sin pay its wage? (Romans 6:23). Or is it when sin is full grown, you get executed, or when sin is full grown, it brings forth death? (James 1:15)
Oh, that men might open their minds to know God as he is revealed in his Son! {ST, January 20, 1890}
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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: APL]
#132197
03/30/11 03:00 PM
03/30/11 03:00 PM
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Green - The quote of EGW is life and character. What Tom said above is this:So the principle that all that we need to know of God, or can know of God, was revealed in the life and character of His Son during His earthly ministry is false. So I think you need to clarify what you mean by a subtle change of "character" to "ministry". Also, John 14:9 was speaking specifically of his life that Philip was seeing. My vote is still with how Tom has interpreted EGW's statement. APL, Sure, I will clarify that. In fact, the word "shift" is more suitable there. Basically, Tom has taken the quote which speaks of Jesus' "life" and "character" and applied those terms to His "earthly ministry." But Mrs. White did not use the term "earthly ministry" anywhere in connection with this statement. Two points of clarification here: 1) Would Mrs. White have held the belief that Jesus only lived on this earth, never before? I do not believe so. Mrs. White speaks of Jesus just as the Bible does--the one who was the Creator and originator of all life. He was the Source of life. His "life," in fact, has meaning far beyond an earthly existence or ministry. "I am the way, the truth, and the life," He says. "He that hath the Son, hath life." To have Jesus is to have life everlasting. (See John 3:36.) 2. Is there anything about Jesus' character that was somehow new or different during His "earthly ministry?" If this were the case, how does one interpret Malachi 3:6? God's law is a reflection of His character. His law is unchanging, therefore His character must also be unchanging. His character must certainly have been the same during His "earthly ministry," as at the times when He walked with Abraham, wrestled with Jacob, and communed with Moses. To transfer one's thoughts of Jesus' character to thoughts of His earthly ministry may seem benign, but in the transfer, a broader picture is given up. Something is lost. It was this shift or change of concept that I was trying to address in my earlier comments. Blessings, Green Cochoa.
We can receive of heaven's light only as we are willing to be emptied of self. We can discern the character of God, and accept Christ by faith, only as we consent to the bringing into captivity of every thought to the obedience of Christ. And to all who do this, the Holy Spirit is given without measure. In Christ "dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are complete in Him." [Colossians 2:9, 10.] {GW 57.1} -- Ellen White.
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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: APL]
#132199
03/30/11 03:06 PM
03/30/11 03:06 PM
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Notice the context for this statement. It is in terms of "commanding." It is not in terms of what God may or may not choose to do in terms of actions against sinners who have passed the threshold of His patience. So is the main problem with sin is that God runs out of patience, and then has to use force to execute judgment? Are the wages of sin execution by God, or does sin pay its wage? (Romans 6:23). Or is it when sin is full grown, you get executed, or when sin is full grown, it brings forth death? (James 1:15) God is jealous, and the LORD revengeth; the LORD revengeth, and is furious; the LORD will take vengeance on his adversaries, and he reserveth wrath for his enemies. The LORD is slow to anger, and great in power, and will not at all acquit the wicked: the LORD hath his way in the whirlwind and in the storm, and the clouds are the dust of his feet. (Nahum 1:2-3) The time is coming when in their fraud and insolence men will reach a point that the Lord will not permit them to pass and they will learn that there is a limit to the forbearance of Jehovah.--9T 13 (1909).
Time will last a little longer until the inhabitants of the earth have filled up the cup of their iniquity, and then the wrath of God, which has so long slumbered, will awake, and this land of light will drink the cup of His unmingled wrath.--1T 363 (1863). I think those statements answer your question. Blessings, Green Cochoa.
We can receive of heaven's light only as we are willing to be emptied of self. We can discern the character of God, and accept Christ by faith, only as we consent to the bringing into captivity of every thought to the obedience of Christ. And to all who do this, the Holy Spirit is given without measure. In Christ "dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are complete in Him." [Colossians 2:9, 10.] {GW 57.1} -- Ellen White.
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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: kland]
#132201
03/30/11 03:58 PM
03/30/11 03:58 PM
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Being quite familiar with your position against capital punishment, kland, I am not surprise that you have seen completely red when you read it, and as a result, as customary, just don’t bother to think things through, but make “cute”, curt and knee-jerk, vacuous/mindless retorts. Notwithstanding the added expenditure of my time, simply for the record, I’ll (where applicable) do this basic/logical thinking for you: NJK:I think it should be easy to readily, logically comprehend that adjudged capital judgement/punishment for their life of murder and violence was being executed. So no benefit for them was at all considered here.
kland:You just spoke about wars, holocausts, bombings and say God just lets things happen, but now in the next breath you say capital punishment is needed?! -I spoke of the death of up to ca. 25 million Russians in death. While it can be argued, though faintly, that Germany had a just war in their attempt to regain the (Germanic) lands that were removed from them from earlier wars, their, even deceptive/deal-breaking, attempt to invade and take over the land of Russia, and that because it had many of the various natural and mineral resources that they needed was a “ war crime” as an “unjust war” and thus the resulting death of 25 million Russians (with ca. 14 million being civilians deaths) were themselves murderous acts by the Nazis. -The Holocausts, just as an act against non-combatants and civilians, let alone its genocidal reasons was also a national and war crime. -The Nuclear Bombing of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, targeting civilian cities, whose “crime” was to have war manufacturing plants with civilians working there, was a (still unprosecuted) War Crime by the United States. -Communist Leaders (e.g, Stalin, Mao Zedong, Pol Pot) starving parts of their population and/or otherwise murdering them were crimes. -The 1994 genoicide in Rwanda was a crime. -The slaughter in Sudan and the Darfur Region was a crime. -Legalized and/or committed 65,000,000+ million abortions per year are individual and national crimes. Capital Punishment, by its inherent legal definition and deliberate judicial process is not, when rightly adjudged, a crime. Also, God could have intervened to supernaturally stopped these, however, especially as there were quite feasible world powers that could have done this intervention, or should have refrained from their actions, but chose not to, God allowed this man-made disaster to occur indeed just like He allows many, if not most/all naturally forming disasters to occur. I also Theologically understand that in this GC, God limits His supernatural interventions and the scope of them, so as not to give the Devil a justified opportunity to similarly, adversely intervene in the “natural” and freely chosen course life of man, and also of naturally developing nature. NJK: Making man work harder to live also serves to limit the level and extent of sinfulness that they engage in when they have too much leisure time on their hand, and physically non-demanding work to do otherwise.
kland:Would you say God made a mistake and now had to make people to work harder? How is that working out? To answer your question: ‘No I would not say that’, and that is neither what I had said! God created this mostly leisure full and painfree life, as it will be in Heaven, for people who would be and remain sinless. So he is not responsible when sinful man took this blessing and turned it into an opportunity to dive headlong into unrestraint evil pursuits! What’s so hard to see here?!? NJK: God presciently foresaw that He would not have such a need until the GC was ended, at the Second Coming. And also, so as not to have people do His will simply out of a fear of bringing about another Flood, He expressedly removed that threat of punishment, with the threat of the Second Coming destruction not being mentioned until the time of the New Covenant.
kland: Ummmm. Something's not making sense here. Capital punishment needed. But don't want people to fear me. But yet want them to fear a greater punishment. Huh? Yes. Indeed. When you are dealing with a person/people who do not care about the life of others and threaten to, or have gratuitously snuffed the lives of others out, then Capital Punishment, and when applicable in its War/Military form, is indeed needed, as prescribed by God (e.g., Gen 9:6, 7). The fear of the Second Coming, as well as other “promised” judgements of God in the Bible is merely to mercifully serve as an beginning step for the sinner to seek to get acquainted with this God that he has not and cannot see. On the flip side, when judiciously manifested, it serves to justly right some key GC wrongs.
“Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to Me.” Matt 25:45 NJK Project
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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: Green Cochoa]
#132204
03/30/11 04:44 PM
03/30/11 04:44 PM
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Yes Green - the wrath of God - when their cup is full, they will receive the wrath of God. Which is what? See Romans 1. And Deuteronomy 31:17, 18. And Jeremiah 33:5. And 2 Chronicles 29:6, 8. And 2 Kings 17:17-20. And Isaiah 57:17. And 1 Kings 14:15, 16. And read EGW in Signs of the Times where she specifically talks about Christ's ministry at His first Advent here: January 20, 1890 God Made Manifest in Christ. Again - Tom's statements are up-healed. No there is nothing new about God's character. But to this point is had been mis-interpreted. Read the whole article. Oh, that men might open their minds to know God as he is revealed in his Son!
Oh, that men might open their minds to know God as he is revealed in his Son! {ST, January 20, 1890}
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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: Tom]
#132207
03/30/11 05:33 PM
03/30/11 05:33 PM
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T: Not everything that happens is for a purpose. There's a reason God has made the decisions that He has made, choosing to allow certain things to happen (like the Holocaust, for example) but this does not mean that God *purposed* for these things to happen. God's allowing certain things to happen, and purposing that they happen are very different things.
M: What were Jesus' options in cases like the Holocaust?
T: That's a pretty tall order for me, isn't it? That is, you're asking me to enumerate the options of divinity? I don't think I'm qualified to do that. 1. What factors does God weigh when choosing to allow things to play out the way they do? 2. Is God free to allow or disallow things like N&A being burned alive and the two bands of fifty being burned alive? 3. Or, are His hands tied? 4. Is Satan free to do as he pleases without limits? 5. Did Jesus, while here in the flesh (as opposed to after He returned to heaven), choose to allow things like ungodly people being burned alive?
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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: Tom]
#132210
03/30/11 05:55 PM
03/30/11 05:55 PM
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M: Tom, in response to the following two questions, here's what I remember what you've said thus far.
1. In the OT, why did Jesus command godly people to kill ungodly people in battle?
M: The reason you believe Jesus commanded godly people to kill ungodly people in battle is because 1) the Jews failed to trust Jesus to defeat their enemies in a godly way, and 2) the Jews expected Him to think and behave like a pagan god.
T: I think an issue being discussed, which kland also chimed on, was the question of what God's expectations were. For example, God said he was going to destroy Israel, and found a new country, with Moses as its father. Moses argued with God and prevailed. Why did God give in to Moses? Ellen wrote: As Moses interceded for Israel, his timidity was lost in his deep interest and love for those for whom he had, in the hands of God, been the means of doing so much. The Lord listened to his pleadings, and granted his unselfish prayer. God had proved His servant; He had tested his faithfulness and his love for that erring, ungrateful people, and nobly had Moses endured the trial. His interest in Israel sprang from no selfish motive. The prosperity of God's chosen people was dearer to him than personal honor, dearer than the privilege of becoming the father of a mighty nation. God was pleased with his faithfulness, his simplicity of heart, and his integrity, and He committed to him, as a faithful shepherd, the great charge of leading Israel to the Promised Land. {PP 319.2} This doesn't sound to me as though Moses failed the test or that God truly wanted to start over with Moses and his descendants. 2. In the OT, why did Jesus command godly people to kill ungodly people through the execution of capital punishment?
M: The reason you believe Jesus commanded godly people to kill ungodly people through the execution of capital punishment is because 1) the Jews failed to trust Jesus to punish them in a godly way, and 2) the Jews expected Him to behave like a pagan god.
T: The point made above comes to play, I think. Was God displeased when Moses argued with Him when He said He was going to create a new nation with Moses as its father? A point I've been making all along is that to understand incidents like this, we need to understand God's character. I've given the example of the hunter/father. In that example, the father's character was such that he was against hunting. That's fundamental to understanding the example. Is it fair to say that God is against killing? (like the father in the story was against hunting). Is it possible to understand God's actions in a similar way to how the father's actions could be understood in the story? Do you agree with my summary of your view? It sounds as though you are saying Moses forced God into a position of commanding godly people to kill ungodly in battle and though the execution of capital punishment. Was Jesus, while here in the flesh (as opposed to after He returned to heaven), forced to command godly people to kill ungodly in battle or through capital punishment? Exodus 22:20 He that sacrificeth unto [any] god, save unto the LORD only, he shall be utterly destroyed.
Numbers 15:35 And the LORD said unto Moses, The man shall be surely put to death: all the congregation shall stone him with stones without the camp.
Deuteronomy 2:34 And we took all his cities at that time, and utterly destroyed the men, and the women, and the little ones, of every city, we left none to remain: 20:17 But thou shalt utterly destroy them; [namely], the Hittites, and the Amorites, the Canaanites, and the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites; as the LORD thy God hath commanded thee:
Joshua 10:40 So Joshua smote all the country of the hills, and of the south, and of the vale, and of the springs, and all their kings: he left none remaining, but utterly destroyed all that breathed, as the LORD God of Israel commanded. You believe Jesus was willing to think and behave like a pagan god in order to gain the trust and respect of the Jews long enough to wean them off such ungodly expectations. Do you believe anything else about it?
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Re: Why did God command people to stone, scorch, and smite sinners to death?
[Re: kland]
#132211
03/30/11 06:39 PM
03/30/11 06:39 PM
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He took old truths, of which he himself was the originator, and placed them before his hearers in heaven's own light. And how different was their representation! What a flood of meaning, and brightness, and spirituality was brought in by their explanation! {RH, July 12, 1898 par. 1}
Does this mean Jesus whitewashed the inconvenient truth? That is, did he present people killing each other as being just and therefore everyone received brightness and spirituality from that flood of meaning? Christ set forth deeper and more spiritual truths than had ever before been heard from rulers, scribes, or elders. "I am the way, the truth, and the life," he declared. The rich treasures of truth opened before the people attracted and charmed them. They were in marked contrast with the spiritless, lifeless expositions of the Old Testament Scriptures by the rabbis. And the miracles which Jesus wrought kept constantly before his hearers the honor and glory of God. He seemed to them a messenger direct from heaven; for he spoke not to their ears only, but to their hearts. As he stood forth in his humility, yet in dignity and majesty, as one born to command, a power attended him; hearts were melted into tenderness. An earnest desire was created to be in his presence, to listen to the voice of him who uttered truth with such solemn melody. {RH, July 12, 1898 par. 2}
Does this mean Jesus explained the killings of the Old Testament that they were right and just and that Jesus came to explain how that fit perfectly with God's character and the listeners then said, Wow, I am charmed and my heart melts into tenderness. I have an earnest desire to be next to you so I can hear how the killings were so just. Every miracle wrought by Christ convinced some of his true character. Had a man in the common walks of life done the same works that Christ did, all would have declared that he was working by the power of God. But there were those who did not receive the light of heaven, and they set themselves more determinedly against this evidence. {RH, July 12, 1898 par. 4}
Is healing the sick in some way supporting the killings, that is showing God's true character? And were the rulers, scribes, and elders upset because Jesus justified the killings and explained how good they were by his works? Is that why they killed Him? In what way were the leaders disagreeing with how Jesus presented God's true character of the killings? It’s quite telling to me that in none of the SOP examples you have cited is “killing” ever addressed. You have to injected that notion in these passages. As I have stated before, Jesus had a chance to completely do away with Capital Punishment in the episode of the woman caught in adultery, however He rather told the men to indeed execute this punishment, however only if they themselves were (currently(?)) without sin. So it seems to me that Jesus did not do away with the Capital Punishment instruction in the OT, but as He did with all other laws, elevated it to the righteous level that it should be on and that was that, those who were guilty of similar and other capital sins, or even lesser, but cherished sins, were in no position to effectuate this judgement. Hypocritically doings so had never been part of God’s will. In the distinct case of murder, most people can truthfully say that they are without that sin, and as stated in Gen 9:6, 7 that is probably the most basic justification for Capital Punishment. Still Jesus’ honoring of the law shows that if someone is harboring hatred in their heart, they are equivalently guilty of murder. So they would be unfit to carry out that punishment. That similarly is a major reason why most people today remain on death row for years, even decades before being executed and why this is increasingly done as humanely as possible. So that no element of revenge, spitefulness and injustice will be added to this judicial process. Interestingly enough, people were stoned to death in God’s Israel apparently so that not a it could justly be a collective judgement (i.e., expressing the disapproval of the Israel society as a whole and not only one person) and thus also so that not a single person would unduly be ‘blamed”/feel guilty for having caused the death of that guilty and deservingly executed person.
“Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to Me.” Matt 25:45 NJK Project
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