Perhaps,
@Trailblazer, you are less familiar with the Bible than you suggest? Because the Bible says, as
@TagliatelliMonster suggests, that God does approve of all of those things. And in the case of the first two, is Himself guilty of them.
I am familiar enough with the Bible, I just don't believe that God actually did those things...
I think that much of the Old Testament is anthropomorphic.
I also don't believe that God walked with Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. I believe these were fictional stories that contained spiritual messages.
I believe that what is on this Christian website is completely absurd. Christians have turned God into a man.
Who was walking with Adam and Eve in the garden?
God created human beings to have fellowship with him. That's why he was walking in the garden: he wanted to meet with Adam and Eve and spend time with them.Sep 1, 2010
God Walks in the Garden - Today Daily Devotional
According to Baha'i beliefs, God neither walks in a garden nor does God 'spend time' with humans. God does not want 'fellowship' with men. God is forever one and alone, self-subsisting.
“Beware, beware, lest thou be led to join partners with the Lord, thy God. He is, and hath from everlasting been, one and alone, without peer or equal, eternal in the past, eternal in the future, detached from all things, ever-abiding, unchangeable, and self-subsisting. He hath assigned no associate unto Himself in His Kingdom, no counsellor to counsel Him, none to compare unto Him, none to rival His glory.”
Gleanings From the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, p. 192
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In case you don't know, Baha'is hold different positions on the Bible and we are free to do so.
"Although Bahá'ís universally share a great respect for the Bible, and acknowledge its status as sacred literature, their individual views about its authoritative status range along the full spectrum of possibilities. At one end there are those who assume the uncritical evangelical or fundamentalist-Christian view that the Bible is wholly and indisputably the word of God. At the other end are Bahá'ís attracted to the liberal, scholarly conclusion that the Bible is no more than a product of complex historical and human forces. Between these extremes is the possibility that the Bible contains the Word of God, but only in a particular sense of the phrase 'Word of God' or in particular texts. I hope to show that a Bahá'í view must lie in this middle area, and can be defined to some degree."
A Baháí View of the Bible
In case you are interested, I lean towards the liberal, scholarly conclusion that the Bible is no more than a product of complex historical and human forces.
"The Bahá'í viewpoint proposed by this essay has been established as follows: The Bible is a reliable source of Divine guidance and salvation, and rightly regarded as a sacred and holy book. However, as a collection of the writings of independent and human authors, it is not necessarily historically accurate. Nor can the words of its writers, although inspired, be strictly defined as 'The Word of God' in the way the original words of Moses and Jesus could have been. Instead there is an area of continuing interest for Bahá'í scholars, possibly involving the creation of new categories for defining authoritative religious literature."
A Baháí View of the Bible