PotatoStew said:
If only guilty people are brought before a particular judge, and he hands out punishment to each of them, you can't say he's unjust, can you?
I most certainly would, if the judge sentenced some with capital punishment, and let others go, with no consistency of sentencing. Surely justice is supposed to be for all, not for some. Anything else is favouritism at best and (in the case of 'Gods chosen people') nepotism at worst.
Take for example the firstborn children of Egypt. These are portrayed as being wiped out in enourmous bloodshed.
If one takes the assumption you stated before, that no-one is innocent, and
everyone deserves death, then why is only a select group held accountable for their actions? If children are considered to have commited so grave a sin that death is warrented, why are some allowed to walk free, even rewarded, and others killed?
PotatoStew said:
Likewise, based on your original premises, I don't think you can conclude that "God is unjust" (as you did for one of your possible conclusions). At best, if there are no innocents, you could say "he may be unjust, but we have no way of knowing". If it's decided that the statement "God is just" is meaningless, then your series of premises seems to break down at #1, and all you can say is "the bible makes a meaningless statement concerning God's justice." Does that seem right?
I think if one worked of the premise that no innocents exist, then the problem would lie with premise 3, not with premise 1.
How's this for a recap:
Premise 0. The bible is correct
Premise 1. God is described as being just in the bible.
Premise 2. Just people do not kill innocents.
Premise 3. God kill innocents in the bible. (flood, 10 plauges of egypt, etc.)
Possible conclusions: The god of the bible is either unjust, does not exist, or is just but got misquoted. Alternatively just people can kill innocents.
Footnote: If one takes the postion that none are innocent, and also the postion that non-innocent people can and should be punished then the conclusion could be "God's actions are indistinguishable from a evil deities actions".
Edited for typo