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Violence & Genocide

Sodom and Gomorrah

God destroys two entire cities with fire. Were there no innocent children in Sodom? What does Abraham's negotiation tell us?

Sodom and Gomorrah illustration
Sodom and Gomorrah
The Passage

Genesis 18:32 , "Then he said, 'May the Lord not be angry, but let me speak once more. What if only ten can be found there?' He answered, 'For the sake of ten, I will not destroy it.'" Genesis 19:24-25 , "Then the Lord rained down burning sulfur on Sodom and Gomorrah , from the Lord out of the heavens. Thus he overthrew those cities and the entire plain, destroying all those living in the cities , and also the vegetation of the land."

The Question

God destroys two cities, presumably including every child within them. Abraham's remarkable negotiation in Genesis 18 establishes that God would spare the entire city for ten righteous people, but not even ten were found. Were there no innocent children?

The text raises profound questions about collective punishment, divine justice, and the nature of mercy.

Before You Read
Scholarly Perspectives
conservativeDivine Justice and Collective Judgment

Traditional interpreters argue that God's foreknowledge of every individual includes perfect knowledge of every person's moral standing. If no one in Sodom was innocent, that is a theological claim about the depth of the city's moral corruption rather than an assertion that infants are morally culpable. Abraham's negotiation itself demonstrates God's willingness to be merciful for the sake of even a small remnant; the fact that ten righteous people could not be found is the story's indictment of Sodom, not a claim that God was unjust.

Lot and his family (the only righteous present) were extracted before destruction, demonstrating that God distinguishes between the guilty and the salvageable.

theologicalAbraham's Intercession as Theological Argument

") and God engages the argument. The text presents God as genuinely responsive to human moral reasoning, not mechanistically executing pre-programmed judgment. The negotiation establishes the principle that divine justice is oriented toward preservation rather than destruction: God would spare many guilty for the sake of a few righteous.

This principle points forward to the atonement logic of both Jewish and Christian theology.

historicalHistorical and Archaeological Context

Archaeological investigations of the Dead Sea region (including work by Steven Collins at Tall el-Hammam) have proposed candidate sites for Sodom that show evidence of violent destruction in the Middle Bronze Age, possibly from a cosmic airburst or seismic event. If the destruction has a natural cause, the narrative may reflect a historical memory of a catastrophic regional event that was theologically interpreted as divine judgment. On this reading, the narrative frames a geological catastrophe as divine action, consistent with the biblical pattern of seeing natural events as expressions of God's governance of history.

criticalLiterary and Ethical Purposes of the Narrative

Critical scholars, including Claus Westermann and Walter Brueggemann, read the Sodom narrative primarily as theological literature exploring the limits of divine patience, the power of intercession, and the nature of hospitality as a covenant value. The specific sin of Sodom in Genesis 19 is violent gang-rape and the violation of hospitality (cf. Ezekiel 16:49-50, which identifies Sodom's sins as pride, gluttony, and neglect of the poor).

The narrative is less concerned with providing a comprehensive moral justification for collective destruction than with exploring the theological dynamics of judgment, mercy, and the righteousness of the Judge of all the earth.

Original Language Notes
Hebrew / Greek Analysis

The Hebrew phrase "the men of Sodom" (anshei Sedom) in 19:4 uses the word anashim, which typically denotes adult males rather than the entire population. The phrase "from young to old" (mi-na'ar ve-ad-zaqen, literally "from youth to elder") describes the mob, not the entire city's demographic. God's action is described as "overthrowing" (haphak, 19:25), the same verb used in Jonah 3:4 and associated with divine judgment elsewhere.

The "sulfur and fire" (gofrit va-esh) language occurs in judgment contexts throughout the Bible (Deuteronomy 29:23; Isaiah 34:9; Revelation 19:20), suggesting a theological idiom for divine judgment that may describe a dramatic natural event.

Key Context
Historical & Literary Context

Sodom and Gomorrah appear throughout the Bible as the paradigmatic example of divine judgment on extreme wickedness: Isaiah 1:9-10, Jeremiah 23:14, Ezekiel 16:46-50, Amos 4:11, Matthew 10:15, and Revelation 11:8 all invoke them as reference points. Ezekiel 16:49-50 notably defines Sodom's sins as "arrogance, overeating and unconcern," as well as "detestable things," expanding beyond the Genesis narrative. The range of sins associated with Sodom in the biblical tradition suggests the city functions as a symbolic archetype of comprehensive moral failure rather than a city condemned for a single act.

Related Passages
Scholarly References
Claus Westermann
Genesis 12-36: A Commentary (1985)
Critical commentary; reads the Sodom narrative as theological literature exploring divine judgment and the limits of intercession.
Walter Brueggemann
Genesis (Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching) (1982)
Homiletical-theological commentary; focuses on Abraham's intercession as a window into the nature of God's justice.
Gordon J. Wenham
Genesis 16-50 (Word Biblical Commentary) (1994)
Evangelical commentary; detailed analysis of the Abraham-God negotiation and the theological significance of the destruction.
Steven Collins and Latayne C. Scott
Discovering the City of Sodom (2013)
Archaeological proposal for Tall el-Hammam as Sodom; examines destruction evidence and implications for the historical core of the narrative.

Sources: Published scholarship View all →

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