It is a blazing hot morning
in a dry, dry, land. A barefoot man dressed in a ragged brown loincloth stumbles behind a pair of
skinny oxen, sidestepping over the ragged furrow dragged into the ground by the
worn wooden plow. He pauses to wipe his brow, and looks over the green,
sprouting barley in the next field, to the hilltop. As he watches, a mass of
men appear above the horizon, the sun glinting off hundreds of spear points.
He pauses.
He watches a moment more, his
mouth and fingers moving as he counts, then drops the plow handle, and runs
towards a shaded grove of trees near a shallow stream. As he nears it, he
shouts to a short woman already watching the hilltop, and then snatches up a
toddling boy and keeps running. He and the woman splash across the stream,
while a teen-aged girl looks back, dropping a basket of half-cleaned vegetables
to the ground.
As she looks, the men descend
the hilltop, and a mass of people begin to fill the horizon. They are led by a
curious procession of oddly-dressed men, surrounding a small box carried
between them on poles. When they reach the oxen, still standing placidly in the
field, one of them steps aside and swings a bronze-colored axe, sweeping the
head from the nearest ox. It falls, dragging the second down next to it,
bawling, still yoked. A second sweep partially decapitates the second ox, and
the girl turns and runs after the others, leaving the basket spilled over the
ground.
The runners don’t pause until
they reach a village, where more people
are arriving from other fields, hurrying through the wooden gate in the low,
mud-brick walls. The man pauses while the women rush inside, and another runs
out and hands him a short javelin. Together with twenty other men he watches
the approaching strangers as the gate is dragged closed behind their backs. The
pounding of the wedges being hammered in is the only sound louder than than the
cooing of the doves sitting on the top of the wall.
The mass of men approach, the
ones in the midst dragging a log. The man sees that the log is the central pole
from the sacred grove near the stream, the source of his village’s prosperity
and the symbol of the goddess that they trust to bring fertility to their crops
and families. Now it has been cut down and turned against them as a weapon of
war.
The forerunners don’t pause
when they reach the defenders, who wait, standing their ground. Ten men move
forward for every defender, and they are instantly hacked down. The man in the
loincloth is among the first to fall. The attackers step over the bodies and
drag the sacred pole to the gates, pause to gather their strength, and then
smash the pole against the wood. the gates crack and bow inward. the men swing
the pole against the gates again and one half breaks free from one hinge and
swings aside, dangling from the gatepost.
The men drop the pole and run
inside, scattering chickens and pigs, and spread out across the courtyard,
filled with old men, women, and children, shouting and clutching at each other
in fear. They hack at them with their swords, impaling others with their spears
and javelins. The villagers scatter, running to hide, crawling into the
storerooms, behind the wattle fences, into the shadow of the walls.
The short woman and her child
flee into the darkness of a stable, followed by the teenaged girl. As they
scrabble among the straw, a man in a short woolen kilt pauses in the light of
the door, a short sword in his hand. He quickly walks to the woman, who now
cowers on the ground, covering the crying child with her ragged cloak. With a
blow, he slices off her arm, and the child screams, still clutching the
detached arm that protected it as it falls away. The woman looks up at him in
shock, and a second blow splits her skull. She falls into the straw of the
stable floor, while the teenaged girl looks on, her mouth working soundlessly.
The man picks the child up by the feet and swings it against the door post,
smashing open its skull. He drops the
twitching child, grabs the girl by the hair, and drags her through the door.
Out in the sunlight, she finally she finds her voice, and screams and screams.
The small courtyard is
littered with bodies of old men, women, and young boys. The girl is thrust
among a group of a dozen other girls, their wrists now being tied together by
cords by two of the attackers. As they watch, pressing against each other, some
of the strangers methodically set fire to the houses, stables, and storerooms
of the village, while others run after the pigs, sheep, chickens, and donkeys,
killing each of them where they catch them. The noise of the screaming girls
and dying animals is deafening, but the strangers work silently, knowing their
business, without speech.
In just a few minutes it is
all over, and the strange procession of men carrying the box enters the village
and sets it down. Several of them bring in a sheep from outside, and the men begin
to prepare a sacrifice of thansgiving. The girls are led outside the walls, and
the smoke rises into the clear blue sky as the flies begin to gather on the
pools of blood, and the bodies.
* * * * *
Folks, this is a little
story, one that i just made this up, right here and now. But if scripture is
accurate, then this scene was repeated in many variations during the Israelite
conquest of Canaan many centuries ago. I don’t have any doubt that an event
just like this occurred, and that such scenes were common at that time and
within that culture.
What I do doubt is that this
scene was commanded by a God who tells me to love him, and to love my neighbor
as myself. Many people tell me just that, and i have heard various reasons.
What is your opinon? Is this
event justified by the gospel of Jesus Christ? Why?
The reason I am asking this
question is because I do not believe that an inerrant reading of Christian
Scripture is adequate to define Christianity. As a Friend, I hold Scripture to
be very important to my understanding of God, but I also hold that the
reflections of the Light within us are affected
by the color of the glass through which we perceive it. I believe that the
Scriptures are inspired, but I do not believe that what I read there today is
has been transmitted infallibly, nor do I believe that what I read there is likely to have been recorded infallibly in the first place.
Think about this, please. We
believe that the Light provides guidance to us from heaven. Is our reception of
it perfect? Can any of us stand and say, "I speak infallibly for God,
because inspiration renders my understanding without flaw or error." I believe the ordinary and
humble answer is, "No," and that this answer has been assumed to be
the case for thousands of years among those who attempt to listen and follow,
as opposed to those who attempt to speak and demand obedience.
I believe that the same scrutiny that we as Friends apply to the inspired ministry in our monthly meetings must also be applied to the physical documents relating the history of God's dealings with humankind.
Scripture has it both ways. On the one hand, Old Testament Scripture records the divine sanction of violent war:
Deuteronomy 20:16: But of the cities of these people which the Lord thy God doth giue thee for an inheritance, thou shalt saue aliue nothing that breatheth:
And on the other, New Testament Scripture teaches that God now commands the opposite:
Yee haue heard, that it hath beene said, Thou shalt loue thy neighbour, and hate thine enemie: But I say vnto you, Loue your enemies, blesse them that curse you, doe good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully vse you, and persecute you: That yee may be the children of your father which is in heauen:
But what is your own belief,
Friend? There are long-standing apologetics available within any Scripture
commentary that will explain the slaughter of the Canaanites in light of a
primitive people who required a progressive revelation, of a doctrine of
successive dispensations, of another of continuous covenantalism, of the
sovereignity of a God who rightfully destrys the flawed pottery to make way for
the better. Are these explanations sufficient to reconcile the apparent views of a God who loves his creation, and of one who hates it?Scripture has it both ways. On the one hand, Old Testament Scripture records the divine sanction of violent war:
Deuteronomy 20:16: But of the cities of these people which the Lord thy God doth giue thee for an inheritance, thou shalt saue aliue nothing that breatheth:
And on the other, New Testament Scripture teaches that God now commands the opposite:
Yee haue heard, that it hath beene said, Thou shalt loue thy neighbour, and hate thine enemie: But I say vnto you, Loue your enemies, blesse them that curse you, doe good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully vse you, and persecute you: That yee may be the children of your father which is in heauen: