Thank you all for keeping the conversation going while I was away for the night!
And thanks to Iacchus for pointing out my blunder - thought I'm sure you understood what I meant. I agree that death is an inevitable consequence of life, but the timing and cruelty of these deaths was clearly "unnecessary".
Presumably your comment "But, the murderer feels the pains of the repercussions which, act as a deterrent." would apply only to future murderers? SUrely there couldn't have been any deterrent for this murderer?
BJQ87 - I have read the sermon now, but what it says to me that God sent His chosen people into exile in Babylon just so's he could free them later and show what a wonderful guy He really is - nothing new, I'm afraid, it's the same point I made earlier.
It tells me I should listen to the word of God - well I do have partial deafness in one ear, but basically if people talk to me I'll hear them - I don't seem to hear anything from God, however.
It also highlighted one important point about God's "message". Even though the Jews were His chosen people and in spite of apparently clear examples of what happens to them when they stray from Him, they continually, perversely, did just that.
So - maybe I should read the Bible? Ok - how about the beginning of Judges 1? (I'll paraphrase it a bit)
Joshua dies & is replace by Judah.
Judah, with his brother Simeon, at God's urging, attacks the Canaanites & Perizzites killing 10,000 men in Bezek alone.
Some seventy kings were captured and had their thumbs and great toes cut off
It goes on in similar vein....
So - is this the word of God that I should listen to? Attack other lands, slaughter the people and torture the rulers?
See - anybody can use the Bible quote game!
To comment on your persecution post - this at last I can accept as historically accurate, and horrific.
There have been similar episodes more recently, too, to show that persecution often fuels the very opposition that it's aiming to suppress.
When the German Army invaded the Ukraine on the 1940's, for example, they were welcomed as liberators. However, then Nazi functionaries arrived to administer the area and treated the locals as sub-humans. The inevitable happened - the whole region rapidly filled with partisans.
The point I'm making is that maybe Christianity became a focus for opposition to an oppressive government, and it wasn't because of the attractiveness of the message at all. I remember reading some time ago that in France & Yugoslavia, also during WWII, many fighters joined the Communist resistance, not for idealogical reasons, but because they were about the only group who were fighting back.
Hi Rebecca - as others have said to me "My heart goes out to you and your family". I wish there was some advice I could give. In Cardiff, where my father lives there is a local Alzheimer's support group that has helped him - maybe there's something similar near you. All I can say is that after eight years it's kind of become part of the background in the family. In our case, though Mam & Dad were regular church-goers, now Dad has joined me in becoming a "declared" Atheist, and I'm sure that the disease is the main reason.
As you wrote, it's even sadder when your mother ignores the inconsistency of God apparently causing the illness, but helping her cope with it. Only this morning I read something similar on the CNN website about Katrina victims.
Oh - and BJQ87 - just as SezMe wrote - please don't leave! - I am enjoying this thread - may we have many more discussions!
YBW
ETA - if you read further into Judges 1 - 1:19, there's an apparent get out clause for us Atheists: "And the Lord was with Judah; and he drave them out of the mountain; but could not drive out the inhabitants of the valley, because they had chariots of iron"
Well - no mountain hereabouts, and mine's a Volkswagen, so I guess I'm OK!