"Deuteronomy 20:10-14"
When you march up to attack a city, make its people an offer of peace. If they accept and open their gates, all the people in it shall be subject to forced labor and shall work for you. If they refuse to make peace and they engage you in battle, lay siege to that city. When the Lord your God delivers it into your hand, to the sword all the men in it. As for the women, the children, the livestock and everything else in the city, you may take these as a plunder for yourselves. And you may use the plunder the Lord your God gives you from your enemies.
Go (post: 1202976) wrote:There are more but I don't have enough time to type them up. I ask that you visit the site for yourself and see why I am in a state of confusion at the moment. I simply want answers to gain an understanding but if I am to be mocked like I was by jaems-kun then I won't even bother and will seek help elsewhere.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1202988) wrote:Context has a lot to do with it. I'm hardly well-versed in the history of Deuteronomy, but I can at least say that, when people base their actions on things like this in the Old Testament, it's usually fairly shaky. The New Testament brings with it a new covenant to which Christians are to adhere. Many of the laws of the Old Testament are no longer used. Also, bear in mind that this verse is talking about a specific series of battles in a war, and not how one should live out their every day life.
Momo-P (post: 1202997) wrote:Also Go, why did you just highlight women? Why not children? Why not livestock? If you're going to take that as "God says it's ok to rape" then I guess it must be ok to rape children and have sex with animals too, right? After all, if you can use the plunder, then sex with ANY of it counts, right?
However, that makes no sense. I don't remember any passage where God said rape was ok. Sure it may say the plunder is theirs to use, but the usage has to apply to God's other rules. After all, if they captured a woman and made her their goddess, that's breaking one of God's commandments. Just because He lets them have this stuff doesn't mean they can do whatever they please with it. It probably just meant they women could be used as servants or even taken as wives.
10 When you go to war against your enemies and the LORD your God delivers them into your hands and you take captives, 11 if you notice among the captives a beautiful woman and are attracted to her, you may take her as your wife. 12 Bring her into your home and have her shave her head, trim her nails 13 and put aside the clothes she was wearing when captured. After she has lived in your house and mourned her father and mother for a full month, then you may go to her and be her husband and she shall be your wife. 14 If you are not pleased with her, let her go wherever she wishes. You must not sell her or treat her as a slave, since you have dishonored her.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1202988) wrote:Context has a lot to do with it. I'm hardly well-versed in the history of Deuteronomy, but I can at least say that, when people base their actions on things like this in the Old Testament, it's usually fairly shaky. The New Testament brings with it a new covenant to which Christians are to adhere. Many of the laws of the Old Testament are no longer used. Also, bear in mind that this verse is talking about a specific series of battles in a war, and not how one should live out their every day life.
Someone else will probably come along and make a far more informed post than I have, but that's the best I can do with what I've got. XD
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Also Go, why did you just highlight women? Why not children? Why not livestock? If you're going to take that as "God says it's ok to rape" then I guess it must be ok to rape children and have sex with animals too, right? After all, if you can use the plunder, then sex with ANY of it counts, right?
Many of the laws of the Old Testament are no longer used.
Sure it may say the plunder is theirs to use, but the usage has to apply to God's other rules.
Go, if you have anymore questions don't be afraid to post them, after all how are you going to get answers to them if you never ask them.
sharien chan (post: 1202981) wrote:However God in the Old Testament was a lot different from the God in the New Testament.
jaems-kun (post: 1202966) wrote:Sooo... You chose this faith... without reading the bible first?
Go (post: 1202968) wrote:No, I read the bible, just not the part about the acts of murder, rape, and slavery. Do I have to read the thing from front to back to be able to call myself a Christian? Isn't it enough that I chose this faith because of Jesus dying on the cross for me?
Momo-P: I was referring to the acts (rape, murder) in the bible that were endorsed by God.
Fish and Chips (post: 1203099) wrote:Someone's reading a lot of their own context into that Deuteronomy passage. "Take these as plunder" refers to the spoils of war, among which human beings were not uncommon. The losing party in most ancient Middle Eastern wars were usually kept as slaves by the victors, though the idea of slavery then differed marginally from slavery now, and for the Israelites even more so. God instructed through Moses that slaves be treated as human beings, and freed after seven years of service, no excuses (unless the slaves themselves requested to stay by their masters' side).
And besides the point, God himself clearly banned rape in the Torah. "Take these" and "Use the plunder" are too multi-functional to ascribe only a single (negative) connotation.
The slaughtering of women and children called for was due to the level of evil they were involved in as a culture. If even one was spared, their beliefs could bring darkness into Gods people (As it has before, many times).
Tundrawolf (post: 1203273) wrote:I spent a lot of time debating this very thing with people. It boils down to this:
Slavery was commonplace back then, and even today, believe it or not, in other countries.
The slaughtering of women and children called for was due to the level of evil they were involved in as a culture. If even one was spared, their beliefs could bring darkness into Gods people (As it has before, many times).
If you are unwilling to believe that allowing people of other cultures into your society will ultimately have an influence over your society, then I cannot tell you any more.
And yes, even children. Genetics can be passed down-and believe it or not, God is a heck of a lot smarter than we are. He knows more than we ever will, and there are levels of wickedness that can be passed on (Sins [curses, people!] of the fathers will be passed down to the children) even in a child.
If you think about the level of wickedness that was popular then (And sometimes even now) it really makes you ill. Back then, before the perfect sacrifice of Jesus Christ to make atonement for sins, literally entire societies had to perish to prevent their destructive and evil ways from spreading-they were so ingrained and without remedy.
Think about it-from a Biblical point of view-the cooking alive of infants on the hands of demonic idols, the harlotry of idol worship (literally sexual practices in worshipping their idols-which were actually demons) and all of the awful things committed, in order to stay pure it was necessary in that time.
Further, conquering armies (Assyrians, ahem) would routinely rape and murder the women, skin alive the men, and generally torture their captives, in ways that would make you sick. Did God ask His people to do these things? No. God is not cruel.
Further still, in case if nobody has noticed-this is a terrible world. If you wish to concentrate and focus on things you feel are wrong in the Bible, why not more productively spend your time fighting actual wrongful slaughters that occur even today?
This is why people who spear each other to death and worship tree frogs can be redeemed in the name of Jesus, because there finally is a Perfect Sacrifice of atonement.
Go (post: 1203381) wrote:The only thing I don't understand about what you said is the children part and things being passed down. You're saying if my parents happened to be wicked, I should receive their same punishment simply for being their child? If both of a child's parents happened to be criminals or even worse, murderers, they should be killed the second they are brought into this world merely by association? They don't have a chance to live a life because of something their parents did? What about those accidentally born in prostitution groups? Maybe that's not the level of wickedness you speak of, but even still. Why should an innocent baby be punished?
Mr.SmartyPants wrote:Kind of like King Solomon. When he married countless women, those women brought their pagan religions with them. As a result, Solomon erected temples for his wives to worship their gods.
As a result, pagan religions mixed with the religion of Yahweh in Israel and problems arose left and right. Syncretism at it's finest. XD
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Gabriel 9.0 (post: 1209678) wrote:Well some people sadly try to use the Lord's word as a excuse to commit a evil act. Some even take what is mentioned in the OT to seriously such as the Ceremonial laws still being important when in reality they are done away with. However The Lords Ten Commandments are still very important which is shown countless of times in both the OT and NT. I feel that war is only necessary when its a situation like WW 2.
Most of what Deuteronomy covers is about the conquest of Cannan.
And keep in mind these people the Israelites went to war against were offending God.
termyt (post: 1210280) wrote:I would tread lightly here. The OT laws have not been "done away with," but their purpose has been fulfilled. At this point, the difference is mostly semantical, but we do not keep the sacrifices and ceremonies because Christ's sacrifice and resurrection have fulfilled our requirements before the law so that we are made blameless in God's sight not because the laws no longer matter.
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