Ever ask yourself questions like "What did Mrs. Lot think about Lot bringing home some good looking strangers?
Lot knew who they were...what makes you think she didn't? He was not engaged in the city's immorality, anymore than those with moral values are engaged in the immoral activities of today's world.
Think about offering her daughters to a mob to protect Lot's new "friends"?
What good was offering his daughters to those who were clearly not interested in women? He was merely buying time. His visitors were fully able to protect themselves as it turned out.
What she thought about the city Lot had brought them to?"
Perhaps it wasn't so bad originally and it had deteriorated over time, in much the same way the world has in our day. You haven't noticed the moral decline? If it's going in a direction that facilitates more freedom to practice immorality, perhaps many would see it as a good thing. It's a funny thing that drunks never notice how intoxicated or ridiculous other drunks are because they are all affected by the same mind altering substance....you actually have to be sober to see how pathetic their behavior is. I see a similarity with how people view the behavior of others in a "mob mentality" sort of thing.....the "everyone's doing it" kind of thinking can be a strong eroding influence on how formerly unacceptable things can become accepted...even welcomed.
And why God turned her into a pillar of salt for wanting to watch God smite that horrible place?
They were told not to look at the things behind. Was it wanting to "watch God smite that horrible place" or was it more a case of thinking about all the material things she had left behind? They got out with only their lives.....she disobeyed and lost hers, highlighting a very important aspect of our worship....strict obedience to God's commands.
Jesus also stressed the importance of not putting undue importance on material possessions when Jerusalem was going to be destroyed in 66 C.E. He told his disciples not to take anything with them...just to be grateful for getting away with their life. They also escaped to the mountains but the final destruction of a Jerusalem didn't happen for four years. There was plenty of time to take all their stuff with them, but it would have made their flight way more difficult and created its own problems. They all started their new life in a new place with nothing of their old life remaining. Another lesson.
Then let Lot take her daughters off into the wilderness and screw them?
For God's worshippers offspring were very important. As relatives of Abraham, Lot and his daughters were the only ones left from that family line...everyone else was swept away in the destruction of the city. Since Lots daughters were betrothed but still virgins, there was no prospect of preserving Lot's family line since the intended "sons-in-law" were no longer alive. The two girls and their father were alone in a mountenous wilderness setting, so there was no prospect of finding any suitable mates. The only way to procure offspring for their father (who was now old) was to bear children to him. Remember that this was before any law was given on marriage or incest....so they broke no law.
It was not an unusual thing for close relatives to marry in those times. Abhraham was married to his half sister. Lot's daughters knew that their father would never consent to them having relations with him, so they got him drunk and both had sons who eventually became patriarchs of their own families that branched into nations. (Genesis 19:27-38)
Lot is "righteous" and she deserves destruction?
You see how twisted your interpretation is? Just because you judge the situation one way, doesn't make it so. You see what you want to see and doing that gives people yourself an excuse to twist everything else.
We need to understand that God is
never wrong....it is we who misinterpret and misunderstand his motives and actions. A good motive on our part will uncover the truth and reinforce our faith in him. This has always been my experience.
Modern people think that these are the moral paragons, who speak for God??
I'm not sure that Lot ever spoke for God...but his story is there in the Bible for a reason. There is a lesson there for all of us who might be interested in learning something.....but for those who just want to find fault.....you just demonstrated how easy it is to judge things on a very superficial level and why it is necessary to have a broader knowledge of the scriptures....and not to judge things on a surface appearance.