Good post. AB is getting a lot of stick from the usual chronically-sarky atheists, but, while my brand of Christianity is different from his, he's not a bad bloke.
Except given your reply to Alan here, was in regards to my posting about Alan's belief in and worship of some form of capricious thug, I wasn't being sarcastic at all. On one level, I agree, Alan is probably helping an old person across the street as we speak, and good naturedly tousling the hair of a much loved grand child (btw that isn't sarcastic either). The issue I was dealing with though is that his beliefs in this case about miracles and his god's action seem morally repugnant, and illogical.
Let's suppose that there is a person that could because they are a great surgeon save a child from dying in agony, but they decide that morning to go and help Alan find his lost contact lens, and then say 'now that I have done that, I don't feel like surgery today' and then went home and the child died in agony? I am sure that Alan would fund that disgusting and probably want action taken against the surgeon, particularly if it was that much loved grandchild with the tousled hair that had just died in agony.
And, before you raise the question of omnipotence here, you would also have to get rid of the idea of omniscience or accept that the death in agony of that child must have been part of 'some vast eternal plan'. If there is a benevelint omniscient god, this must be the best of all possible worlds, so Alan's god not only found his contact lens and allowed the child to die in agony but has planned for that all the way through. Again Alan would be horrified if a human did that,but here suspends that judgement. That seems to me very dangerous an, in addition, a complete denial of any concept of free will, never mind Alan's version with its illogical break between cause and effect that he has never managed to understand on here.
So Alan may be a nice guy irl ,and further he's obviously intelligent but his belief here allows him to approve of actions he would descry from a fellow human, and warps his thinking to accept patent illogicalities that he would throw out normally. That seems to be a type of thinking that should be roundly challenged, and was what I did, with in this case,no sarcasm. Coming as I do from a place where the two positives 'Aye, right' are sarcasm, I use it frequently, but my disgust at the supposed actions of Alan's thug god is not sarcasm