Some of this is given by theologians to try and address/explain something. I've no idea why Satan is left alive. What I do know, is that it doesn't seem to be the answer. The story of the wheat and tares talks about a desire that no wheat is harmed. You address a scenario where it'd seem, at one time in history, there was literally nothing in the human populace but weeds and no one to spare, but Noah and his family. That is the 'given' scenario so it does no good, on your part, on Dr. Sadler's part, or anybody else, to try and second-guess His care and concern. Sadler nor the UB gave a 'better' answer. All that came was a person's own 'sensibilities' to try and whitewash what he didn't understand. He wasn't a theologian.
:nono: We don't get to rewrite our own history. There are points in the O.T. that aren't easy. While 'common' sense cries foul, we aren't writing the story, we are being instructed by it. It is BEST to learn the lesson instead of completely avoiding it. Did Dr. Sadler see a burning bush? :nono: Did Dr. Sadler wrestle with God? :nono: Did Caino walk in a firey furnace? :nono:
Not true. There is no poor excusing. We wade through all the messy parts of it as the history it is (unless you are denying all of the Israelite's history). It is WAY worse to make up a story like Dr. Sadler did. In a way, I've come to see God similarly: Good, as you do, but the difference is "I wrested with God" and didn't rewrite or edit Him. If I did, I'D be God! I don't want to be my own god. I can't be my own god. I have to be the creature and be His creature. I, personally, have no other choice. I'm not arrogant, not to that extent. I have to take God as He is. I don't want to follow a god that came out of my or someone else's head. You at least, in your fleshly head, have to acknowledge He isn't a God out of my own head. At least you have to agree on that point.