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Objection

The Canaanite Conquest Was Genocide

The Canaanite conquest commands were genocide, so the God of the Bible is morally monstrous.

The conquest texts describe a unique act of divine judgment after long patience, not a standing permission for ethnic hatred, private vengeance, or religious violence.

The objection at its strongest

Read the commands plainly. Deuteronomy 20:16–17 orders Israel to leave alive “nothing that breathes” in the Canaanite cities, to devote them to complete destruction. Joshua 6:21 reports the sword falling on man and woman, young and old, at Jericho. Later, Israel is told to strike Amalek and “put to death men and women, children and infants” (1 Samuel 15:3).

By any modern measure, this looks like genocide: the deliberate destruction of a national, ethnic, or religious group, with God as the one who ordered it. “They were wicked” cannot cover the infants, who had done nothing. A deity who commands the killing of babies looks morally indistinguishable from the war-gods of the surrounding nations, only with better press.

Feel the weight before you answer it

Do not rush past the horror to the apologetic. The texts are violent, infants are named, and a person who is not disturbed by them has stopped reading carefully. The right posture is the one Abraham takes when he pleads for Sodom: “Shall not the Judge of all the earth do what is just?” (Genesis 18:25). That is a question put to God, in trust, not a verdict against him.

The objection’s real force is the equation of conquest with genocide as we now use the word: the targeting of a people because of who they are. Everything turns on whether that is what the texts actually present.

It is judgment for wickedness, not hatred of a race

The stated ground is never ethnicity; it is specific, entrenched evil. Leviticus 18:24–30 catalogs the practices, including child sacrifice, for which “the land vomited out its inhabitants,” and warns Israel that the land will vomit them out too if they do the same. Deuteronomy 9:4–6 is blunt: Israel receives the land “not because of your righteousness,” but because of the wickedness of the nations and a promise to the patriarchs.

Three features mark this as judicial, not racial:

  • The same standard threatens Israel, and was later executed on Israel in the exile. Genocidal ideology never indicts its own side.
  • Outsiders can cross over. Rahab the Canaanite and her family are spared and grafted in (Joshua 2); the Gibeonites are preserved (Joshua 11:19). The category is moral, not genetic.
  • God waited centuries. He told Abraham judgment would be delayed because “the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet complete” (Genesis 15:16).

Stand to Reason’s Jonathan Noyes frames it as overdue justice rather than impulse: God enacting capital punishment on a society that had committed capital crimes for generations, after long patience.

Read the war texts in their own genre

Ancient Near Eastern conquest accounts routinely use sweeping, stereotyped language; “I left no survivor,” “I destroyed them utterly”, as standard rhetoric of total victory, even when the records show the enemy very much alive afterward. Scripture shows the same pattern internally: Joshua says whole regions were “utterly destroyed,” yet Judges 1–3 has those same peoples still numerous and needing to be driven out. “Men and women, young and old” reads in this setting as a merism for everyone in the stronghold, and the targets (Jericho, Ai, Hazor) were fortified royal-military centers, not nurseries.

This is not a convenient escape hatch; it is reading the text as its first audience would. Hold it modestly. The point is not that no one died, but that the language is hyperbolic battle-report, not a literal census of slaughtered toddlers. The conquest was real and severe; it was also described in the idiom of its age.

A one-time judgment, never a template

Even granting all of the above, the strongest safeguard is that the conquest is unrepeatable. It is tied to one land, one covenant moment, and the direct command of the Judge of all the earth, not a standing license. No Christian inherits Joshua’s commission. When the disciples want to “call down fire” on a village, Jesus rebukes them (Luke 9:54–56). The church’s only weapons are witness, suffering love, and proclamation; anyone who invokes the conquest to justify violence today has abandoned the One he claims to follow.

The hardest residue is the infants. Scripture does not trivialize that, and neither should we. But the Author of life is not a murderer when he takes back what he alone gave; death for those whose lives are cut short is, on the Christian view, not annihilation but a return to the God who judges justly and who himself bore judgment at the cross.

Full rebuttal

The argument behind the answer

1
Objective Morality and GodObjective moral obligation and the intrinsic worth of human persons are at home in a world created and governed by a morally perfect God.

The moral argument does not claim atheists cannot know or do moral good. It asks what kind of reality best explains binding moral obligation, human dignity, guilt, and moral accountability.

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Premises

  1. 1Humans commonly treat some actions as truly right or wrong, not just disliked by a group.
  2. 2Human persons possess a worth that should not be reduced to power, preference, usefulness, or social consensus.
  3. 3Christian theism grounds moral obligation and human dignity in the character of God and the image of God in humanity.

Keep the claim exactly right

The moral argument is constantly misheard, so state it precisely. It does not claim that unbelievers cannot be good, cannot tell right from wrong, or cannot raise decent families. They plainly can and do. The argument is not about moral knowledge (how we come to recognize right and wrong) or moral practice (whether we live up to it). It is about moral ontology: what kind of reality could make moral obligations genuinely binding on us in the first place.

The Stanford Encyclopedia survey describes this whole family of arguments as reasoning from some feature of morality to God as its best explanation. The Christian is not insisting that atheists have no morals; he is pressing a question the atheist must also answer: when you say an act is truly wrong, not just unfashionable or forbidden by your tribe, what makes that true?

The thing that actually needs explaining

Two features of moral life resist easy reduction.

The first is binding obligation. Most people, on reflection, hold that torturing a child for entertainment is not just distasteful or socially counterproductive but really, mind-independently wrong, even if every society came to approve of it. That is a claim about how things are, not about how we happen to feel. A standard form of the argument grants exactly this: there are objective moral facts, and then asks what best explains them.

The second is human worth. We treat persons as having a dignity that does not rise and fall with their usefulness, their power, or the consensus around them. The weak, the unborn, the enemy, and the prisoner each retain a worth that forbids certain treatment. But if a human being is finally just rearranged matter, it is hard to locate where that non-negotiable worth could come from. Christianity grounds it in persons being made in the image of God: a dignity conferred by the Creator, not earned by achievement or assigned by society.

Naturalism's honest options

The unbeliever has real answers here, and they deserve real engagement rather than caricature.

  • Morality is an evolved instinct. Very likely our moral feelings did emerge through evolution. But that explains the feeling, not the obligation. If “do not betray your friend” reduces to a useful impulse inherited from our ancestors, then in the cases where betrayal would actually pay, the impulse carries no authority to bind me. Explaining why we have moral sentiments is not the same as showing those sentiments answer to anything true.
  • Morality is a social contract. Useful, but it makes the majority the measure. A society that agreed to exterminate a minority would, on this view, be doing nothing objectively wrong; only something others dislike. Almost no one truly believes that. The reformer who stands against his entire culture is often right against the consensus, which means the consensus was never the standard.
  • Moral facts simply exist, with no God. This is the most serious option: a non-theistic moral realism on which values are real, abstract features of reality. It should be weighed honestly. But it strains to explain how an abstract value could obligate a person or issue anything resembling a command. The atheist philosopher J. L. Mackie felt this so acutely that he judged objective moral facts would be metaphysically “queer,” too strange to fit a purely physical world, and so denied they exist at all. That is consistent, but notice the cost: moral outrage at real evil becomes, strictly, a useful illusion. Theism lets us keep the conviction that some things are really wrong.

Euthyphro, and where the law leads

The classic counter is the Euthyphro dilemma: is something good because God commands it (then goodness is arbitrary; he could have commanded cruelty) or does God command it because it is good (then goodness stands above God, and we never needed him)?

The Christian answer declines both horns. Goodness is neither an arbitrary divine decree nor a standard hovering above God; it is grounded in God’s own necessary and unchanging character. He does not consult an external rule of love and justice, nor invent one on a whim. He is love and justice, and his commands express what he is. Cruelty was never a live option, because it contradicts his nature.

Here the argument turns pastoral. The same moral law that lets us name evil for what it is also turns and indicts us, which is the honest weight underneath every appeal to the problem of evil. If there is a real moral law, we have all broken it. Christianity does not flinch from that verdict; it answers it with a cross. The God who grounds the law is the God who bore its penalty.

Key quotes

Moral arguments for God's existence form a diverse family of arguments that reason from some feature of morality or the moral life to the existence of God, usually understood as a morally good creator of the universe.
Moral Arguments for the Existence of God, Introduction

Scripture References

Bottom line

The moral argument never claimed unbelievers can’t be good. It asks the harder question: what makes “that is truly wrong” actually true, and where does the unbudging worth of a human person come from? Instinct, contract, and consensus can explain our moral feelings but cannot ground a binding obligation over us. A morally perfect God who made us in his image can. And the very law that exposes the world’s evil exposes our own, which is exactly why the gospel is good news.

Open argument page

Key quotes

God was enacting a form of capital punishment on a people that had committed capital crimes for centuries.
Why a Good God Commanded the Israelites to Destroy the Canaanites, on judgment for wickedness

If they push back

Even if the adults were guilty, what about the infants and children?

This is the genuinely hard question, and you keep your integrity by saying so. Two things hold it. First, the language of the war texts is sweeping ancient battle-rhetoric aimed at fortified military centers, so the picture of armies hunting nurseries is likely the genre, not the history. Second, even where children died, the God who gives every life has the right to take it, and on the Christian view a life cut short is not snuffed out but received by a perfectly just God. That is not a tidy answer, and you should not pretend it is, but it is a coherent one.

Isn’t “they were wicked” exactly what every conqueror says about the people they slaughter?

It is, which is why the telltale sign is whether the account turns the same knife on its own side. This one does. The very laws that condemn Canaanite practice warn Israel it will be expelled for copying it, and the prophets later announce that judgment falling on Israel itself. Propaganda flatters the home team; these texts indict it. The corroborating evidence of Canaanite child sacrifice from outside the Bible cuts the same way.

If God could command this then, why can’t a believer claim such a command now?

Because the conquest is explicitly a one-time, bounded act, not a precedent. There is no ongoing mandate, the land-promise is fulfilled, and Jesus directly forbids his followers to take up the sword for the kingdom. Anyone who claims a fresh command to exterminate a people is, by the New Testament’s own standard, a false prophet, and is contradicted by the entire shape of Christian ethics, which is martyrdom, not massacre.

Common mistakes

  • Skipping past the moral weight to score the apologetic point. Concede the horror first; a believer who feels nothing here is not trustworthy on it.
  • Leaning so hard on hyperbole and genre that you deny any real killing happened. The claim is that the language is stereotyped battle-report, not that the conquest was bloodless.
  • Forgetting to stress uniqueness. If you leave the conquest sounding like a repeatable template, you have handed the objector the “religious violence” charge.
  • Pretending the problem of the children is easily solved. Offer the real considerations, then admit the limits of what we can see.

Bottom line

The conquest is presented as delayed judgment on specific, horrific wickedness, not hatred of a race; after four centuries of patience, described in the sweeping idiom of ancient war. Outsiders like Rahab are spared, Israel faces the same standard, and the command is a one-time act no Christian inherits. It is a hard text honestly faced, not a charter for genocide.

Sources

Secondary context

Why a Good God Commanded the Israelites to Destroy the Canaanites

Popular apologetics article addressing divine judgment, patience, protection, and the conquest narratives.

Jonathan Noyes, “Why a Good God Commanded the Israelites to Destroy the Canaanites,” Stand to Reason, September 10, 2024, accessed June 16, 2026.

Open source

Reference

BibleRef

Reference pages used for BibleRef-first links to Scripture passages.

BibleRef, accessed June 16, 2026.

Open source

Reference

Moral Arguments for the Existence of God

Academic reference article surveying arguments that reason from morality, obligation, dignity, or moral knowledge to God.

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Moral Arguments for the Existence of God,” accessed June 16, 2026.

Open source

Secondary context

Wes Huff Debunks TOP 7 Atheist Arguments

Long-form apologetics interview addressing common atheist objections about creation, morality, religious exclusivity, Jesus’ existence, and the resurrection.

Wes Huff, “Wes Huff Debunks TOP 7 Atheist Arguments w/ John Lovell,” The John Lovell Show, Warrior Poet Society, YouTube, November 6, 2025, accessed June 16, 2026.

Open source

Secondary context

Wes Huff Challenged On Christianity's Toughest Question

Apologetics video focused on the problem of evil, moral objectivity, the cross, and the already-not-yet shape of Christian hope.

Wes Huff, “Wes Huff Challenged On Christianity’s TOUGHEST Question (Why Evil?),” Daily Dose Of Wisdom, YouTube, February 13, 2026, accessed June 16, 2026.

Open source