You bring up the value of life under God's eyes right? So if I value my life I should value what God did to preserve it?
That's a huge problem I have with the whole God idea, I think it's the main problem, why would you value something that's so easily made (God creating everything). Would you value a dot on a piece of paper if Picasso made it? Or value a gold medal won by a world chess champion vs. a dog? When something is done without any effort what so ever, how valuable can that thing/action be?
The reason it has value is because the one who created said, it has value. Period. I could go into lenghty explanations about currency and why it has value, but I'm tiring of analogies. Do you really think it is reasonable to compare a human life to a dot on a piece of paper? Those things are arbitrary. Using absurd comparisons to try and force your point, really doesn't demonstrate sincere thinking.
How does the 'effort' of God relate to value? Again, you have stated an opinion. But that isn't proof. You are saying, or appear to be saying, that effort is the determiner of value. Please provide some evidence to support such a notion.
It wouldn't destroy my way of life if he turned out to exist. My life didn't change one bit when I stopped believing God existed. I've never had a need for God or any supreme being and sometimes I don't understand why people do.
Tisk, tisk. We already covered this a while back. I explained in great length why you have a need. If God is real, and if the bible is true, do you have a need? Yes or no. Now, you can say, I don't believe those things, but you certainly can't say tht you don't understand why people need God. That is not being honest my friend.
Like I said, your problem is you don't know you are starving. You don't know you are drowning. And you don't know you are in debt. And so why would you see any value in a life preserver, the bread of life, or someone paying your fine. You don't think you have a need for any of those things.
If what the Bible teaches is true, then you have an eternal need, whether you believe it or not, and whether you see the value in it or not. People don't give much thought of their need for air, until they don't have any.
Are you going to die? The answer is yes, of course. In fact, even as you read this, the hand of death is pushing you closer to the edge of eternity. Eternity is a long time to be wrong.
And you are arguing that because all things are easy for God, that His gift doesn't have enough meaning for you to accept it. Sorry, but that just doesn't make any sense. No more sense than a man refusing to have his debt paid off, because the person paying it off is too wealthy. Although I would contend with your position here. No matter how trivial you think God's gift to be, He did give Himself. And whether He knew the outcome or not, He still gave His all.
When you say God can do anything, you are right and wrong. There are things I can do, but won't do. There are things so abhorrent to me, that I would die before I would do them. So saying God is able to do something is really only part of the truth. God has a nature. And because of that nature, there are things he will not do. Lie, for example. And He will not violate His character. This is what you are missing, among other things. And it is paramount.
-“The Bible treated allegorically becomes putty in the hands of the exegete.” John Walvoord
"I'm not saying scientists don't overstate their results. They do. And it's understandable, too...If you spend years working toward a certain goal and make no progress, of course you are going to spin your results in a positive light." Ivellious