You would personally torture a little girl to death to save yourself?SuperSheep wrote:Put young girl through torture to save world? I would.
Bee
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You would personally torture a little girl to death to save yourself?SuperSheep wrote:Put young girl through torture to save world? I would.
Save the world. Not only himself. The good of the many outweight the good fo the few.Bet51987 wrote:You would personally torture a little girl to death to save yourself?SuperSheep wrote:Put young girl through torture to save world? I would.
Bee
That isn't being fair. Would you refuse to bend your morals even if it meant watching everyone you know and love including your own children fall into despair, suffer and then die?Bet51987 wrote:You would personally torture a little girl to death to save yourself?
Bee
Ha. Shak, Thorne is one of the more outspoken Christians here.shaktazuki wrote:Not a big fan of Christianity, then?
Agreed.woodchip wrote:We can all sit here and make measured statements about what we would or would not do so, until the situation actually occurs, we have no clue what we would wind up doing.
It is fair. I just replaced the OP's Jewish person with a little girl and the gun with a torture room. So far, I've seen three groups of people respond. The Kirks who would die before torturing the little girl because their empathy will not permit it. The Spocks who would consider her life expendable to save the world, and the Mengele's because of their total disregard for human life.Krom wrote:That isn't being fair. Would you refuse to bend your morals even if it meant watching everyone you know and love including your own children fall into despair, suffer and then die?Bet51987 wrote:You would personally torture a little girl to death to save yourself?
Bee
It's a thought experiment, and looking at the extremes, even hypothetically, can be revealing. When Einstein was thinking about what it would be like to ride on a wave of light, I'm sure someone would have dismissed it as a waste of time, since no one can ride on waves of light...Foil wrote:I think Thorne's point is that these "zero-win scenarios" aren't always worth discussing, primarily because there are no good solutions, and just boil down to vague comparisons of bad vs. worse.
Krom wrote:Bombing a countryside is something done from a considerable distance and it allows people to maintain "mental distance" from the act of killing. While putting someone through torture on the other hand is a very up close and personal experience that can't be easily kept at a "mental distance".
It's still an open question as to whether maintaining mental distance provides for clear and unimpaired judgment or whether looking into the girl's eyes reveals something important about the ethical dilemma that mental distance fails to provide.woodchip wrote:On paper, killing a little girl to save millions of other little girls seems like a reasonable thing to do...until you actually look into her eyes and see yourself looking back. Lotsa luck.
Precisely,but the only problem is this is a hyper-hypothetical situation. It would not happen. Dilemma averted.Krom wrote:No Bet, being fair would be "You would personally torture a little girl to save the world?". I highly doubt anyone here under any circumstances would torture a little girl to save only themselves.
What if the one who would be tortured was YOU? What would you want?
You said: "I draw the line at even considering scenarios as whacked out as sacrificing a young girl for the salvation of the whole world. It's an implausible and disturbed line of thinking, and better not even to go there." If you wish to take as your defense that there is a fundamental dissimilarity between the two situations - sacrificing a young girl to save the world, versus sacrificing one's only begotten son to save the world - a necessary component in both our religions, btw - feel free to illustrate how they are fundamentally dissimilar. It wasn't meant to antagonize.Sergeant Thorne wrote:You're usually so discriminating and precise, shaktazuki, I fully expected that reply from someone else, as an antagonism, or from a lack of understanding regarding the gospel of Jesus Christ, which bears no more than the weakest cosmetic similarity.
I'm going to suggest you have unreconciled conflicts... or, at least, nuances that need explicating. (see also v 51, 52)I would ask what right anyone has to the life of the little girl. ... I find myself coming to the conclusion that it would be wrong for the majority to kill the minority to save themselves. For the minority to sacrifice themselves for the sake of the majority is highly commendable...
It's not your life to give.
There is no difference between yourself and the world. It's just numbers.Krom wrote:No Bet, being fair would be "You would personally torture a little girl to save the world?".
I wish that was true, but it's definately not.I highly doubt anyone here under any circumstances would torture a little girl to save only themselves.
At nine, I would want him to stop and I would be screaming in agony as he kept at it. I would just want him to stop so I can go home.What if the one who would be tortured was YOU? What would you want?
Nice try. Happy Holidays but you won't be getting a Christmas card.Bet51987 wrote:You would personally torture a little girl to death to save yourself?SuperSheep wrote:Put young girl through torture to save world? I would.
Bee
shaktazuki wrote:.....
I'm going to suggest you have unreconciled conflicts... or, at least, nuances that need explicating. (see also v 51, 52)
No, No, I wasn't trying anything. I was just surprised at your answer since you never struck me as the type who could. If you prefer, I will change the word "yourself" to "the world". I just want to know.SuperSheep wrote:Nice try. Happy Holidays but you won't be getting a Christmas card.Bet51987 wrote:You would personally torture a little girl to death to save yourself?SuperSheep wrote:Put young girl through torture to save world? I would.
Bee
Did you read v. 50 - 52? That was the Spirit of God speaking through Caiaphas, who was the High Priest at the time, which was why I mentioned verses 51 and 52. Here's a link to all three, so you can read them in context: http://www.gnpcb.org/esv/search/?q=John+11%3A50-52Duper wrote:shaktazuki wrote:.....
I'm going to suggest you have unreconciled conflicts... or, at least, nuances that need explicating. (see also v 51, 52)
Not sure what your intent is in this quote of passage. This is Sanhedrin plotting the death of Jesus.
So, we ask the fresh-faced little girl if she wouldn't mind dying to save everyone, and she, being the innocent thing she is, says yes. Start from there.Fundimentally? Easy, God offered Himself as a sacrifice. He allowed people to bring this plot to fruition.
Given the multiplicity of Christian sects in the world, it is fair to say there is no "Christian" theology to gain a grasp of. There is, in fact, no universal doctrine among them. They disagree on the Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit, on the relationship of these three to each other, on the relationship of these three to us, and on every other point.I don't know what your religion is shakt, but you don't seem to have a thorough grasp of Christian theology.
But the death of Jesus was not just. Read what Paul had to say about it.shaktazuki wrote:The Spirit, through Caiaphas, has proclaimed as a general principle that one may be slain to save many.
It was expedient, and it was God's purpose, and it was done by the will of Christ himself, but the sacrificing of Jesus was not a just act on the part of the ones who did it.Acts 2:23 wrote:"Him, being delivered by the determined purpose and foreknowledge of God, you have taken by lawless hands, have crucified, and put to death; ...
Now how can it be a general principle that we are meant to take from this and yet it was wrong? Besides all of that, I'm not arguing that it's wrong for someone to die for the people, I'm arguing that it's wrong for someone to be killed/murdered for the people.Matthew 26:24 wrote:"The Son of Man indeed goes just as it is written of Him, but woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed! It would have been good for that man if he had not been born."
I am not a monster and I didn't appreciate being portrayed as one but since you have since changed your rebuttal, allow me to elaborate on mine.Bet51987 wrote:No, No, I wasn't trying anything. I was just surprised at your answer since you never struck me as the type who could. If you prefer, I will change the word "yourself" to "the world". I just want to know.SuperSheep wrote:Nice try. Happy Holidays but you won't be getting a Christmas card.Bet51987 wrote:You would personally torture a little girl to death to save yourself?SuperSheep wrote:Put young girl through torture to save world? I would.
Bee
I also don't believe in God and never will but I have no problem saying Merry Christmas since it simply marks the birth of Jesus Christ. If I knew your email address I would send you a Christmas card.
I also believe that the scenarios in this thread have played out many times during WW2. I can visualize a Nazi, SS trooper, or ....the cold indifferent Mengele type, making a father shoot his daughter without showing the slightest remorse.
Bee
Then it falls to you to reconcile these verses with the ones I have cited.I'm not arguing that it's wrong for someone to die for the people, I'm arguing that it's wrong for someone to be killed/murdered for the people.
Ah. Would you agree that it is God alone who can declare that one should slay another?Sergeant Thorne wrote: If it is a precedent, then surely it is not a precedent for our use.
Valid point. So let's try some more realistic scenarios that cover the same ethical point.Sergeant Thorne wrote:But I draw the line at even considering scenarios as whacked out as sacrificing a young girl for the salvation of the whole world. It's an implausible and disturbed line of thinking, and better not even to go there.
I never meant it that way but have a nice holiday.SuperSheep wrote:I am not a monster and I didn't appreciate being portrayed as one....
I thought more about this and believe me I gave it a lot of thought but my conclusion always came out the same. If anyone tortures an 8 year old girl to save either themselves or the entire world then they are truly monsters in my book.SuperSheep wrote: So, yes, an 8 year old girl for the entire world has a very easy answer for me. Although personally I don't think humanity has earned the gift of that life.
So before this turns into an abortion thread or my savior is better than your savior thread give us the modern day scenario so we can complain and pontificateAggressor Prime wrote:......I am using this to represent something in modern day and in this situation, you cannot kill the threat.
I really don't have a good answer for that. I think that maybe to state that God would have to make a direct declaration in any particular case would be to ignore the physical or spiritual authority structure that has God as its source, but maybe I'm reading too much into your statement. That not withstanding, I believe I would agree. I think that's Biblical.shaktazuki wrote:Ah. Would you agree that it is God alone who can declare that one should slay another?Sergeant Thorne wrote: If it is a precedent, then surely it is not a precedent for our use.
This is why this moral dilemma is moot for you and I. I would need a direct command to kill.Sergeant Thorne wrote:I really don't have a good answer for that. I think that maybe to state that God would have to make a direct declaration in any particular case would be to ignore the physical or spiritual authority structure that has God as its source, but maybe I'm reading too much into your statement. That not withstanding, I believe I would agree. I think that's Biblical.shaktazuki wrote:Ah. Would you agree that it is God alone who can declare that one should slay another?Sergeant Thorne wrote: If it is a precedent, then surely it is not a precedent for our use.
If you mean "kill innocents", then I can understand your position. If you mean "to kill anyone under any circumstances", I'm going to have to disagree.shaktazuki wrote:I would need a direct command to kill
Not, of course, a definitive answer, because it doesn't say what the appropriate time to kill IS.Ecclesiastes 3:1-3 wrote:To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted; a time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up
The Esther story certainly implies that self defense was an acceptable reason to kill. There was no direct command from God here.Esther 8:11-12 wrote:Wherein the king granted the Jews which were in every city to gather themselves together, and to stand for their life, to destroy, to slay, and to cause to perish, all the power of the people and province that would assault them, both little ones and women, and to take the spoil of them for a prey
Psalms 82:3-4 wrote:Defend the poor and fatherless: do justice to the afflicted and needy. Deliver the poor and needy: rid them out of the hand of the wicked.
As Christians, we have an DUTY to protect the weak. But none of these text specifically say we can use force in that purpose.Isaiah 61:1-1 (also quoted by Christ) wrote:The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon me; because the LORD hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek; he hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound; to proclaim the acceptable year of the LORD, and the day of vengeance of our God; to comfort all that mourn;
I'm using the New King James version here becuase I think it does a better job translating in this case. The KJV says "Do violence to no man". The word translated "violence" is the Greek "Diaseio" which means:Luke 3:14 NKJ wrote:Likewise the soldiers asked him, saying, "And what shall we do?" So he said to them, "Do not intimidate anyone or accuse falsely, and be content with your wages."
Romans 13:3-4 wrote:For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? do that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the same: For he is the minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain: for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil.
As flawed as the Roman government was, the basic purpose of it's police force was to enforce law and keep the peace, WITH FORCE. The New Testament clearly supports this purpose while criticizing the misuse of power and the abuse of force.1 Peter 2:13-15 wrote:Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord's sake: whether it be to the king, as supreme; Or unto governors, as unto them that are sent by him for the punishment of evildoers, and for the praise of them that do well. For so is the will of God, that with well doing ye may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men: