Paul, I guess different approaches work for different people. Why should we give up our starting point, which is God, and adhere to their starting point, which then becomes the default and God is in the dock being judged? No apologist should be saying things like "because the Bible says so" without establishing a foundation. But in the end we can say "the Bible says so" or, "man says so".PaulSacramento wrote:When you have the likes of Hitchens and others, proclaiming that God is indeed a moral monster, I don't think that many of the arguments of the past hold much sway now.
Arguments like " It is God' right to punish those he sees fit" or "God shows mercy on who he chooses", or things along those lines, just don't work VS the modern skeptic that has been "armed" the the militant atheist rhetoric.
The "bible says so", doesn't work either ( since the bible is for them the problem of the matter in many cases).
Since we are speaking of this situation with Elisha, let me use this as an example:
A human is far more moral than God because, I for example, would NOT of sent bears to maul these misguide youths but would have showed my superiour moral by forgiving them or another line that could be taken is that God could have repayed their taunts in kind with all of them being struck BALD at that instant !
Etc, etc...
The modern skeptics have not brought a single new objection. Al they have done is changed the language to be more provocative. The likes of Harris, Dawkins and Hitchens are philosophical midgets, and their arguments are even ripped apart by the more intelligent atheists Like Ruse, so let's not give it any more credibility than is appropriate.
Speculating on what God should do or not do is a game that we should not play, as it implies we know better than Him. If they wish to play that game, then so be it, but then they should justify the basis for their morality, which is logically prior to them making any moral judgments.