Difficult
Questions?
Question:
Why did God order Israel to kill men, women and children?
In
the Old Testament there are a number of instances of God telling Israel
to completely wipe out the peoples who inhabited the land called Palestine
(e.g. Deuteronomy 7:1-4, 16, 24). Doesn't that make the God of
the Old Testament a harsh and unjust God, completely different from
the God of love portrayed in the New Testament?
Answer:
If
we are to adequately answer this we will have to give careful consideration
to what the Bible says. To understand this apparent situation
we need to understand:
a)
the nature of God
b)
the nation of Israel and the surrounding nations
c)
the options of the inhabitants.
a)
The Nature of God
The
Bible's descriptions of God are not at variance between Old and New
Testaments.
For
example in the Old Testament we find God saying, "The soul who
sins is the one who will die." (Ezek 18:5)
In
the New Testament, we find the apostle, Paul, writing "the wages
of sin is death" (Rom 6:23).
However,
in the Old Testament we also find God declaring, "I take no
pleasure in the death of anyone" (Ezek 18:32).
Similarly
in the New Testament, we find the apostle, Peter, writing about God,
"He is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish."
(2 Peter 3:9).
Now
in both testaments, the way to avoid death was quite clear:
"Repent
and live!" (Ezek 18:32) and "not wanting anyone to perish,
but everyone to come to repentance" (2 Peter 3:9).
For
the moment that will be enough about God:
-
sin will be punished by death
-
God doesn't want death to come to man
-
death is avoided by repentance, turning away from the sin.
b)
The Nation of Israel and the Surrounding Nations
i)
Israel
Israel
were a nation created by God, starting from Abraham, then through Isaac
and finally through Jacob, who was renamed Israel by God. While
in Egypt the families grew over about four hundred years to become the
equivalent of a nation of well over a million people.
At
the Exodus (see Exodus, chapter 1 to 12) God took them out of Egypt
and meeting with them at Mount Sinai created a new nation out of them
who would be a special people, specifically related to God (see Exodus
19). The objective of this was to show the world the possibility
of a nation being led and guided by God, i.e. to act as a light to the
rest of the world, revealing the goodness of God and His plan for His
world.
To
achieve this possibility God instructed them to remove all the existing
inhabitants of the land in order to create a new national identity.
ii)
The Surrounding Nations
When
we look at the people that Israel were told to destroy, we are told
they were to be destroyed because of their wickedness (Deut 9:4), and
because they worshipped idols and would turn Israel to those idols
and away from God (Deut 7:4,16).
The
picture we are given is of nations in possession of the land God had
promised Israel, who were totally established in worshipping idols and
all of the practices that went with that (e.g. sacrificing children).
From
the beginning of the Bible we are shown mankind that has a propensity
to turn away from God and turn to all kinds of foolish life styles that
can only be described as pagan and uncivilised in the extreme!
This
propensity to turn away from God is what the Bible calls 'Sin' and because
Sin is living contrary to the design of the Creator, it means that such
people live utterly destructive life styles.
Because
mankind seems to be tainted with this tendency, it also spreads like
a virus unless checked. If it is left unchecked, the moral direction
of any society is downwards, as our own society is showing at the beginning
of the twenty first century.
iii)
Israel's folly
God
knew that if Israel simply went into the land and mingled with the idol
worshippers there, they would soon be led astray by them. Hence the
objective of removing all the existing inhabitants.
Today
we understand the need to destroy Cancer cells before they destroy the
body. We may not understand it because we don't understand the
awfulness and destructiveness of Sin, but what we are considering in
this question is a surgical operation.
A
number of the wars fought in the last century and, indeed, in this century,
have been those fought to prevent something worse happen. This
is what was behind God's instructions to Israel (but wait until you
get to Part c) below before you make a final judgement!)
In
fact this mingling with the idol worshippers did happen, even while
Israel were wandering in the desert on the way to the land (see Numbers
25:1,2).
After
Israel had settled in the land and after their leader Joshua had died,
they quickly gave way to this tendency again (e.g. Judges 2:10-13).
In
fact so often did they give way, that eventually the Lord allowed the
inhabitants who had not been cleared out of the land to
remain to act as a thorn in Israel's side to continually bring them
to their senses (see Judges 2:18-23)
There
followed a continuing cycle in their early centuries in the land: apostasy
(e.g. Judges 3:7) - disciplinary judgement (Judges 3:8) - repentance
(Judges 3:9a) - deliverance from God (Judges 3:9b,10) - peace (Judges
3:11).
c)
Options of the Inhabitants
Returning
now to our original question, we must look at the possibilities that
were given to the inhabitants, which fit in with all that we have said
so far.
There
were actually three options:
Option
No.1 - To leave the Land
There
was nothing to stop the inhabitants leaving the land and this some did.
Option
No.2 - To join Israel
Some
of the inhabitants actually joined the people of Israel and this was
perfectly acceptable. Examples of this were Rahab, a spy-prostitute
(Joshua 6:25), and the Gibeonite tribe (read Joshua 9).
Option
No.3 - To resist God and Israel and die
This
did happen for a number - but it was their choice! Similarly
today as we saw in 2 Peter 2:9 the choice of death is a personal choice
and NOT what God wants.
Our
Difficulty in Understanding
We
need to understand and hang on to the basic reasoning behind the instruction
from God to destroy any unbelieving idolaters who resisted. It
was to remove a scourge of pagan lifestyle and to do all possible to
prevent Israel being corrupted. The picture given above, of Cancer,
needs to be borne in mind.
Where
we have a difficulty in understanding all this, it is probably because
we fail to see the awfulness of Sin and its consequences.
We
live very much in a Society where virtually everything goes (see the
Question in this series that speaks about anything going in this so-called
'Pluralistic Society') and because of that we find it difficult to grasp
the concept of wrong that is so abhorrent to a Perfect God that He has
to deal with it with destructive judgement.
And
that brings us right back to the subject of Jesus. To pick up again
on one of the earlier verses we quoted (Romans 6:23) "the
wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in
Christ Jesus".
God
is always wanting to bring life. WE are the
ones who refuse it and prefer death instead!
May
it not be so.
......................................
If you wish to discuss this question further, or ask similar questions,
please feel free to e-mail
tony.thomas@rochfordcc.co.uk
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