heavycola wrote:In for a penny, in for a pound, as we say round these parts. If you decide you believe that a guy got eaten by a giant fish, or that god was actually worried that people were going to build a tower to heaven, or that every paleantologist and geologist is wrong, you may as well buy the virgin birth and the filicide-as-atonement stuff.
it makes me sad that people behave a certain way because they believe in hell. If someone doesn't commit adultery because he thinks he'll burn in hell, and someone else doesn't because he doesn't want to hurt his loved one and believes in the promises he made, well i like the latter guy better, and i hope he's gay.
I think the confusion that we're having is that you possibly believe that we Christians "don't" do certain things because it's considered a sin. Therefore, by not committing these sins we are somehow earning "points" for good behavior (or at least not accumulating negative "points") in the eyes of God.
If we earn enough good "points" we get to enter the pearly gates, if not...then we go to hell. So we go around telling everyone to "do" this or "don't do" that.
In reality, we believe that nobody is good enough to earn God's favor. Only Jesus Christ can justify us and make us worthy. Not because of anything we have done (i.e. - good deeds or not doing bad deeds). Any good deeds that we perform are done out of gratitude for being saved by Jesus Christ, not so we can lord it over others and say, "looky looky, I'm so much better than those 'sinners' over there".
I can understand your skepticism over miracles. My short answer to that is that since mankind normally dismisses God, He sometimes supercedes the laws of science and performs the supernatural to get our attention. However, miracles have a very short lifespan as far as getting people to believe. Probably why Jesus focused more on "love they neighbor" than saying "watch what I can do this time, disciples".