Because your a civilized human being and have some common sense about very basic morality?
I think you take "common sense about very basic morality" for granted.
I mean, with that kind of argument I could call any random bull the "moral way" to do things, and when it is called into question I'd simply label the other side as being barbaric and say they are uncivilized and lack "common sense about very basic morality".
That's a great way to get your point across.
I find that frequently, when pointing out the barbaric morality portrayed in the OT, religionists fall back on the red herring of the difficulty of establishing an objective morality. I submit that is a subject for a different thread. It is indeed a challenging philosophical discussion, which relying on a personal interpretation of an ancient collection of purity taboos does nothing to facilitate. As long as we agree on some basic outcomes, like that killing babies is immoral, it is not necessary to use this thread to agree on a moral basis. Do you agree that killing babies is immoral? If so, your questions are irrelevant.
I don't believe actions are moral or immoral. Those words have no objective meaning. Do I think one should kill babies as a general rule? Absolutely not. And I have reasons for that.
My contention with your position is that it presupposes that we all accept some murky abstract idea of morality.
To say that our discussion is not a discussion of the morality of any action is to downplay it.
The OP criticizes the actions prescribed by the Torah in certain situations as being "unjust". However, to make that claim one first must provide a standard for what is just and what isn't. That's all I've been asking for, an answer to how do we determine the justice of an action?
And if the only answer to that is "because you are a civilized human being and have some common sense about very basic morality" then the answer is bound to be proven insufficient in extreme cases and thus ineffective at establishing morality.
In other words, if you believe something is wrong, attributing that action to God does not make it right. What we're looking here is moral consistency, not agreement on a moral basis.
That may be what
you're looking for, but I'm responding to your search with the challenge that we cannot begin to have any discussion of moral consistency without having an agreed upon moral basis.
Obviously, those of us who believe in the Torah and those of you who don't have a different moral basis. I would agree that from YOUR position many actions prescribed by the Torah are morally inconsistent. However, from the Torah-position, those actions or not morally inconsistent. Why? Because we have a different basis of morality.
Your morality, apparently, comes from some sort of imagined inherent sense of right and wrong. Mine comes from what God commands. The mere fact that we start from different places automatically ensures that our ideas of consistency will be different.
Now, if you believe that killing babies is right, then we may have to talk.
I don't describe actions as "right" or "wrong". That does no one any good. If you were to ask me if anything were right or wrong my response will always be "It depends."
Is it wrong to kill babies? Well,it depends.
What do you mean when you say "wrong"? Do you mean it is something one should not do? Then yes, I'd agree one should not do it.
If you then say: "Well how can you explain the Bible's account of God commanding people to kill babies?"
I would respond "Killing babies, in the case of God commanding it, is merely a consequence of something one should always do, which is obey what God commands."
For someone in my position, it is never a question of "Is x wrong or is y right?" it is always a matter of "Is this what God wants me to do?" That is all that matters in my perspective when it comes to determining the morality of an action, does God desire the action or not.