People in the Bible you feel sorry for.

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Going_Nowhere

Well-known member
Nov 10, 2019
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#1
I feel bad for Abel. From what little you read of him, he seemed like he genuinely wanted to do right in the eyes of God....only to be murdered by his brother. He surely didn't deserve that kind of fate.


Is there anyone in the Good Book that you have sympathy for?
 

JohnDB

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2021
6,214
2,522
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#3
Moses....
He was miserable most of his life...

Jeremiah...king of the whining...wrote lamentations.

Elijah...he felt like a failure every step of the way.

John the Baptist also felt like he didn't do the right things either....orphaned, kicked out of the Essenes, and killed by Herod.

Caleb....of the 12 spies.

Stephan...reject of the Jews and then became a believer in Jesus but was a "reject" of Jesus's followers because he was a hellenized jew...rejected to the point of starvation. Then picked on by the Sanhedrin to kill...because he didn't matter enough for anyone to stand up for him on his behalf.
 

Genipher

Well-known member
Jan 6, 2019
2,285
1,688
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#4
Ezekiel. He wasn't allowed to mourn for his wife when she died.

Eve. Because it was all her fault and she probably lived with that realization her whole life.

Whoever the last person was in the group Moses led that had to die before they could enter the promised land. You know that everybody was probably closely watching that ONE person, waiting for and perhaps even wishing for his death. Can you imagine having that hanging over your head?
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,188
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#5
Leah

married but Jacob didnt love her, he loved her sister Rachel more.
Nothing she did pleased him though she bore him many sons

I keep wondering why couldnt Jacob had said, well have you met my twin brother?

also, Dinah being the only daughter with 12 brothers, and then having her fiance murdered by them...
 

Genipher

Well-known member
Jan 6, 2019
2,285
1,688
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#6
Leah

married but Jacob didnt love her, he loved her sister Rachel more.
Nothing she did pleased him though she bore him many sons

I keep wondering why couldnt Jacob had said, well have you met my twin brother?

also, Dinah being the only daughter with 12 brothers, and then having her fiance murdered by them...
Yeah, Dinah was raped first. Poor girl. I always kinda sympathized with the brothers who wanted justice for their sister...

I also always felt bad for Leah, too.
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,188
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#7
mm I didnt..it was Dinah's life not theirs. Hamor was willing to offer their land to them and daughters to make amends and they were all willing to be circumcised.

KJV translation says defiled, others say raped
but seems weird that the next sentence Sechem LOVED the damsel and spake kindly to her (see Genesis chapter 34)

Plus what happned to Dinah after that episode is a bit of a mystery.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,349
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#9
I could say Peter... He was rescued from a death sentence, but later he was put to death on a cross. But he went to that cross joyfully.

Strangely Peter was the one who said he had never met Jesus because he was afraid for his life, then later he went to the cross with joy. Hmmm... Maybe Peter figured something out between those two times.

I'm going to say Peter anyway. He reminds me of a Labrador puppy - always excited, always running headlong, always tripping over his feet. But at least he learned from his mistakes.
 
Jan 12, 2022
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#10
The people of this generation because they fulfill all the terrible things God said about terrible generations and what God shall do to them and their children will be terrible, it is already at the door.
 

JaumeJ

Senior Member
Jul 2, 2011
21,429
6,707
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#11
Most times the word, generation, is a reference to flesh in general. Mankind without God in mind has always been evil.

ps this would include me and you, previous to inviting Jesus into our hearts.
 
Jan 25, 2015
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#12
I feel bad for Abel. From what little you read of him, he seemed like he genuinely wanted to do right in the eyes of God....only to be murdered by his brother. He surely didn't deserve that kind of fate.


Is there anyone in the Good Book that you have sympathy for?
Moses....
He was miserable most of his life...

Jeremiah...king of the whining...wrote lamentations.

Elijah...he felt like a failure every step of the way.

John the Baptist also felt like he didn't do the right things either....orphaned, kicked out of the Essenes, and killed by Herod.

Caleb....of the 12 spies.

Stephan...reject of the Jews and then became a believer in Jesus but was a "reject" of Jesus's followers because he was a hellenized jew...rejected to the point of starvation. Then picked on by the Sanhedrin to kill...because he didn't matter enough for anyone to stand up for him on his behalf.
Maybe from a worldly standard we should feel sorry for them but from a Kingdom perspective they are all now with Abba Father in the presence of our King. How amazing.

Abel was a picture of Yeshua, the one that was accepted by YHVH and then murdered in innocence.
 

arthurfleminger

Well-known member
Aug 18, 2021
1,405
780
113
#13
I feel bad for Abel. From what little you read of him, he seemed like he genuinely wanted to do right in the eyes of God....only to be murdered by his brother. He surely didn't deserve that kind of fate.


Is there anyone in the Good Book that you have sympathy for?
I feel bad for Paraoh, in the book of Exodus. Pharaoh claimed to be a God and was the most powerful man on earth, with great armies, wealth, and peoples. Unfortunately for Pharaoh, he decided to challenge God, and God's servant Moses. So, Pharaoh set himself against God and the Israelites. The outcome was fixed from the beginning.

Why do I feel sorry for Pharoah? Because God personally picked him to display His power. "For Scripture says to Pharaoh: “I raised you up for this very purpose, that I might display my power in you and that my name might be proclaimed in all the earth.” Romans 9:17.
 

arthurfleminger

Well-known member
Aug 18, 2021
1,405
780
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#14
I feel bad for Paraoh, in the book of Exodus. Pharaoh claimed to be a God and was the most powerful man on earth, with great armies, wealth, and peoples. Unfortunately for Pharaoh, he decided to challenge God, and God's servant Moses. So, Pharaoh set himself against God and the Israelites. The outcome was fixed from the beginning.

Why do I feel sorry for Pharoah? Because God personally picked him to display His power. "For Scripture says to Pharaoh: “I raised you up for this very purpose, that I might display my power in you and that my name might be proclaimed in all the earth.” Romans 9:17.
And, of course, I also feel sorry for the Jews/Scribes/Pharisees, the builders who couldn't see or understand truth and rejected the very cornerstone. Why do I feel sorry for them? If I put myself in their place, at their time, in their situation I probably would have also rejected the claims of this young 30 year old man, Jesus. The Jews/Scribes/Pharisees were wrong but I can understand them.

And of course they took it way too far when they began plotting to kill Jesus.
 
G

Gojira

Guest
#15
I feel bad for Abel. From what little you read of him, he seemed like he genuinely wanted to do right in the eyes of God....only to be murdered by his brother. He surely didn't deserve that kind of fate.


Is there anyone in the Good Book that you have sympathy for?
Tamar. What an unnecessary tragedy.
 
G

Gojira

Guest
#16
Yeah, Dinah was raped first. Poor girl. I always kinda sympathized with the brothers who wanted justice for their sister...

I also always felt bad for Leah, too.
But the way they acquired that justice...
 

Deuteronomy

Well-known member
Jun 11, 2018
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#17
Ichabod - this baby lost his mother, father and grandfather right around the time of his birth, and he was given the worst name ever given to anyone in history (by his mother as she lay dying after giving him birth). Ichabod = "no glory/the glory has departed" ("the glory has departed from Israel"). He was given this name because the Philistines had captured the Ark of the Covenant and taken it away from Israel.

This is not a good name for a baby (unless it's a Disney cartoon character, I guess :))
 

Eli1

Well-known member
Apr 5, 2022
4,758
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#18
David
 

Genipher

Well-known member
Jan 6, 2019
2,285
1,688
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#20
But the way they acquired that justice...
Okay, granted. But I've always kinda understood their response. If someone attacked my daughter, I'd want to go scorched earth, too.