Anatomy of an Apologetic Sleight of Hand

Click image to view larger version.

In the realm of Christian apologetics, few topics generate as much palpable discomfort as the Old Testament narratives depicting divinely ordered genocide.

While many believers prefer to gloss over these passages, serious apologists feel compelled to defend them. They must reconcile a God described as “perfect love” with a deity who issues explicit commands to slaughter entire populations.

The most ethically indefensible aspect of these narratives is not the killing of armed combatants, or even wicked adults, but the explicit instructions to eradicate children.

“Now go and strike Amalek and utterly destroy all that he has, and do not spare him; but put to death both man and woman, child and infant, ox and sheep, camel and donkey.” (1 Samuel 15:3, NASB95, emphasis added)

When skeptics press apologists on the morality of butchering “child and infant,” we rarely get a direct answer. Instead, we encounter a highly practiced rhetorical maneuver—a sleight of hand designed to make the horrific appear justifiable.

I call this tactic the Divine Judgment Evasion. It is a three-step process of deflection, sanitization, and moral capitulation that demands closer scrutiny.

The first step in this evasion is a refusal to remain focused on the actual victims in question.

When an atheist asks, “How do you justify God ordering a soldier to run a sword through a nursing baby?“, the apologist almost never talks about the baby. Instead, they immediately pivot to the behavior of the adults in that culture.

You will hear lengthy dissertations on the wickedness of the Canaanites, their sexual deviancy, or their own practices of child sacrifice. The apologist floods the conversation with the sins of the parents.

Why this is a deflection: The wickedness of an adult culture is entirely irrelevant to the moral status of a newborn. By shifting the focus to adult depravity, the apologist hopes the listener will forget that the subject of the inquiry is an innocent life that has committed no depravity whatsoever.

Once the pivot to adult wickedness is complete, the apologist introduces courtroom terminology to reframe the massacre.

We are told that God is a righteous “Judge” and that these actions are His way of “holding a culture to account” for their sins. This language is strategically chosen. We respect judges. We believe in holding criminals to account. It sounds civilized.

Why this fails logically: A judge holds moral agents responsible for their actions.

An infant has no agency. A toddler has committed no crime. They cannot possess “wickedness” and they cannot be “judged” in any intelligible moral sense.

When an apologist uses judicial language to describe the killing of a child based on the sins of their parents, they are defending collective punishment—a practice condemned by modern international law and most moral philosophers as inherently unjust. They are attempting to sanitize an atrocity by dressing it up in the robes of a courtroom.

If forced to confront the reality that infants are being killed for the sins of others, the apologist plays their final card: Divine Command Theory.

This is the argument that because God is the ultimate authority and creator of life, He has the right to take it whenever and however He sees fit. What would be evil for a human to do is “good” when God commands it.

This position is fatal to the Christian claim of “objective moral realism.”

If morality is objective, then the act of slaughtering an innocent child is wrong, regardless of who orders it. If an action becomes “good” simply because a powerful deity commands it, morality is arbitrary. It reduces “goodness” to obedience. It is a theological version of “might makes right.”

The hypocrisy is stark: If a human general ordered the execution of a terrorist’s baby to “judge” the father’s wickedness, Christians would rightly call that general a moral monster. Yet, when their text attributes the same action to God, they call it “Divine Justice.”

This brings us to a difficult question regarding the apologists who employ this evasion.

Many of these individuals are highly intelligent, educated, and in other contexts, deeply moral people who would fight to protect living children. Yet, when defending their theology, they repeatedly employ a tactic that relies on a fundamental category error—treating an infant as a culpable criminal.

Why?

Is it a genuine cognitive blind spot? Is the dissonance created by these texts so powerful that their minds subconsciously block the realization that they have changed the subject from the innocent to the guilty?

Or is it something darker? Is it intellectual mendacity—a calculated, dishonest refusal to engage with the text as it is written, because doing so would cause their entire theological framework to collapse?

When an apologist defends the indefensible by pretending a baby is a criminal, they are not protecting God’s reputation. They are sacrificing their own intellectual and moral integrity on the altar of theological preservation.


Update:

The Pivot in Real-Time: A Study in Cognitive Dissonance

The following interactions from a recent discussion in the Facebook group “Christian Apologetics” serve as a live demonstration of the “Apologetic Pivot.” Rather surprisingly, these comments were in direct response to a post pointing out the very deflections they exemplified. These responses illustrate how, when confronted with the state-sponsored execution of infants, the apologist’s immediate instinct is to shield their theology by shifting the focus toward adult behavior, fatalistic outcomes, or unsubstantiated claims of “mercy.”

The Initial Post:

This table deconstructs three specific deflections, highlighting the logical incoherence required to maintain these positions.

Excerpt from CommentThe Pivot in Practice
MI-BO:By the time God ordered the Israelites to slaughter every man, woman, and child… they were given plenty of time to repent… it wasn’t a first or second generation ordeal, but a continuous, cultural cycle… because ‘their iniquity was not yet full.’The Agency Redirection: MI-BO focuses entirely on a 400-year timeline of adult behavior. This is an attempt to use judicial language to justify an act that has no judicial basis. By centering the argument on “time to repent,” he ignores the fact that an infant has no agency to repent or change a “cultural cycle.” He effectively changes the subject from the victim’s innocence to the parents’ stubbornness.
CA-BR:The fate of the infants and children in reality? Before they were old enough to know the difference between good and evil, they were spared a life of dishonoring their maker. They would neither live a life displeasing to God nor suffer eternal separation from him.The Fatalist Paradox: CA-BR rebrands the slaughter as “mercy”—an unsubstantiated claim that relies on a deterministic future. She suggests that the termination of a life before it can “sin” is a pro-social benefit. This implies that life itself is a liability and that slaughter is the most compassionate outcome. This fatalism contradicts any claim that the victims had a genuine opportunity for a positive existence.
OW-AS:Suppose ten [righteous] are found there… Each time, God replies that He will not destroy the city for the sake of that number… This is essentially saying that in Sodom and Gomorrah there are not 1 righteous person there.The Erasure of the Non-Agent: OW-AS uses a bargaining narrative to erase the existence of the infant. If “ten righteous” would save a city, and the city was destroyed, OW-AS‘s logic implies that infants are either “unrighteous” or irrelevant. He focuses on the “rape culture” of adult men to sanitize the incineration of newborns, failing to substantiate why the lack of “righteous” adults justifies the destruction of children.

The Inability to Substantiate

These responses share a common failure: the inability to stay on the topic of the infant. The apologist must pivot because a direct defense of killing a non-agent is impossible within any compassionate or pro-social framework. Instead, they retreat into “might-makes-right” assertions, labeling the acts as “holy” or “righteous” without providing any objective substantiation for these terms.

When believers appeal to “objective moral values” to justify these events, they are making an unsubstantiated claim. There is no compassionate logic that leads to the conclusion that slaughtering a nursing child is a “good.” These maneuvers are not genuine arguments but are calculated deflections designed to protect a theological narrative from the unbearable reality of its own implications.

Click image for larger version.

One response to “✓ The Divine Judgment Evasion”

  1. J Avatar
    J

    Honestly, Divine Command Theory is a moral mess (especially in light of Christian understandings of history). How would you tell an omnipotent god apart from a malevolent demon in control of a dystopian universe? How did Abraham know that it was God would told him to get ready to offer Isaac as as opposed to Satan or a deluded state of mind?

    There’s also the fact that no one seems to be able to agree on whether there was actually substantial child sacrifice in ancient Canaan or if the group that eventually “evolved” into the first Israelites was a Canaanite nation that sometimes took part in human sacrifice.

    Could Jephthah’s sacrifice of his daughter in Judges have a loose folktale of an authentic ritual that was later softened to make it seem as if he only reluctantly went through with a general promise to offer the “first thing he saw” in exchange for victory. The story in (1?) Kings where the King of Moab apparently makes a human sacrifice to Chemosh to turn back an Israelite army has some unusual parallels that make it seem like the same sense could have intended with Judges.

Leave a reply to J Cancel reply

Recent posts

  • Alvin Plantinga’s “Warrant” isn’t an epistemic upgrade; it’s a design for inaccuracy. My formal proof demonstrates that maximizing the binary status of “knowledge” forces a cognitive system to be less accurate than one simply tracking evidence. We must eliminate “knowledge” as a rigorous concept, replacing it with credencing—the honest pursuit…

  • This article critiques the stark gap between the New Testament’s unequivocal promises of answered prayer and their empirical failure. It examines the theological “bait-and-switch” where bold pulpit guarantees of supernatural intervention are neutralized by “creative hermeneutics” in small groups, transforming literal promises into unfalsifiable, psychological coping mechanisms through evasive logic…

  • This article characterizes theology as a “floating fortress”—internally coherent but isolated from empirical reality. It details how specific theological claims regarding prayer, miracles, and scientific facts fail verification tests. The argument posits that theology survives only through evasion tactics like redefinition and metaphor, functioning as a self-contained simulation rather than…

  • This post applies parsimony (Occam’s Razor) to evaluate Christian Theism. It contrasts naturalism’s high “inductive density” with the precarious “stack of unverified assumptions” required for Christian belief, such as a disembodied mind and omni-attributes. It argues that ad hoc explanations for divine hiddenness further erode the probability of theistic claims,…

  • Modern apologists argue that religious belief is a rational map of evidence, likening it to scientific frameworks. However, a deeper analysis reveals a stark contrast. While science adapts to reality through empirical testing and falsifiability, theology insulates belief from contradictory evidence. The theological system absorbs anomalies instead of yielding to…

  • This post critiques the concept of “childlike faith” in religion, arguing that it promotes an uncritical acceptance of beliefs without evidence. It highlights that while children naturally trust authority figures, this lack of skepticism can lead to false beliefs. The author emphasizes the importance of cognitive maturity and predictive power…

  • This analysis examines the agonizing moral conflict presented by the explicit biblical command to slaughter Amalekite infants in 1 Samuel 15:3. Written from a skeptical, moral non-realist perspective, it rigorously deconstructs the various apologetic strategies employed to defend this divine directive as “good.” The post critiques common evasions, such as…

  • Modern Christian apologetics claims faith is based on evidence, but this is contradicted by practices within the faith. Children are encouraged to accept beliefs uncritically, while adults seeking evidence face discouragement. The community rewards conformity over inquiry, using moral obligations to stifle skepticism. Thus, the belief system prioritizes preservation over…

  • In the realm of Christian apologetics, few topics generate as much palpable discomfort as the Old Testament narratives depicting divinely ordered genocide. While many believers prefer to gloss over these passages, serious apologists feel compelled to defend them. They must reconcile a God described as “perfect love” with a deity…

  • This post examines various conditions Christians often attach to prayer promises, transforming them into unfalsifiable claims. It highlights how these ‘failsafe’ mechanisms protect the belief system from scrutiny, allowing believers to reinterpret prayer outcomes either as successes or failures based on internal states or hidden conditions. This results in a…

  • In public discourse, labels such as “atheist,” “agnostic,” and “Christian” often oversimplify complex beliefs, leading to misunderstandings. These tags are low-resolution summaries that hinder rational discussions. Genuine inquiry requires moving beyond labels to assess individual credences and evidence. Understanding belief as a gradient reflects the nuances of thought, promoting clarity…

  • The featured argument, often employed in Christian apologetics, asserts that the universe’s intelligibility implies a divine mind. However, a meticulous examination reveals logical flaws, such as equivocation on “intelligible,” unsubstantiated jumps from observations to conclusions about authorship, and the failure to consider alternative explanations. Ultimately, while the universe exhibits structure…

  • The piece discusses how historical figures like Jesus and Alexander the Great undergo “legendary inflation,” where narratives evolve into more than mere history, shaped by cultural needs and societal functions. As communities invest meaning in these figures, their stories absorb mythical elements and motifs over time. This phenomenon illustrates how…

  • This post argues against extreme views in debates about the historical Jesus, emphasizing the distinction between the theological narrative shaped by scriptural interpretation and the existence of a human core. It maintains that while the Gospels serve theological purposes, they do not negate the likelihood of a historical figure, supported…

  • Hebrews 11:1 is often misquoted as a clear definition of faith, but its Greek origins reveal ambiguity. Different interpretations exist, leading to confusion in Christian discourse. Faith is described both as assurance and as evidence, contributing to semantic sloppiness. Consequently, discussions about faith lack clarity and rigor, oscillating between certitude…

  • This post emphasizes the importance of using AI as a tool for Christian apologetics rather than a replacement for personal discernment. It addresses common concerns among Christians about AI, advocating for its responsible application in improving reasoning, clarity, and theological accuracy. The article outlines various use cases for AI, such…