1. If you were in the bunk, how would you vote and what reasons would you give, regarding God's guilt? (Write in character as a member of that bunk) 2. Given the historical perspective that you now have, is your position supported or challenged? Why and how? 3. Based on our conversation of Theodicy in class, describe some of the varieties demonstrated in the movie. The Holocaust, or the systematic persecution and murder of six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators is truly the most terrifying example of brutality in history I have ever witnessed. It hard to imagine myself in the bunks and eventually gas chambers, but my ideology would be simple. If I were in the bunk, and I was asked to value God’s guilt, I would vote him …show more content…
According to the scripture, the Israelites were in slavery for 400 years before reaching freedom and the promised land. “Know for certain that your offspring will be sojourners in a land that is not theirs and will be servants there, and they will be afflicted for 400 years.” (Genesis 15:13) When God says this to Abraham in Genesis, it is a foreshadowing of not only their slavery, but his assistance. This leaves the question, why would God allow such an event to happen for 400 years, and then assist the …show more content…
Trains were described as loading on more and more Jews everyday, and we now know over 6 million Jews were killed in these camps. So, as I conclude my first analysis of the exodus of the Jews from Egypt, I would question why God would not help us. If we have even more Jews who are being killed rather than owned, isn’t the situation worse than the one in Egypt? Why wouldn’t God help us, too? Surely, those questions are difficult to answer in the bunk. I would further label God as guilty by drawing another reference to a less-well known story of God helping the