I don't think I have missed the point as it has been repeated ad nauseam within this topic. I doubt whether Alan would agree with what I have said as it does not allow the notion of freedom he seems to be arguing for. What I was suggesting was that an omniscient and omnipotent God does not do random, all is determined by an omnipresent God. Humans using an intellectual thought process need the concept of 'random' to fill in the gaps where they cannot see the determining principle or accept that all is divinely determined. In this scenario, there is no freedom but there is the opportunity to be free from human self centred attachments and unite with the divine state (Heaven) as indicated in this paraphrase of Matt 6 19-21 'Don’t attach yourself to transient earthly pleasures but unite with the eternal delights of the Divine. What you treasure is where your heart is.'
1) the idea of random seems to be the only alternative to deterministic, unless you can give an argument which sees a third way. So far nobody, especially Alan, has been able to do this.
2) Nobody is suggesting that our choices are a result of randomness, not even Alan. It is simply the default position if you reject determinism.
3) If 'all is determined by an omnipresent God' then either A)we are powerless to make choices which go against what he wishes OR B) He set up the deterministic structure of the universe, which includes us, and, especially in this context, our brains. However there is no evidence that this God even exists.
4) What on earth do you mean by 'opportunity' in this scenario? You have argued that this God determines everything, hence we have no 'opportunity' at all. God decides whether we will follow his wishes or go against them in some way. Incidentally, I would also suggest that by following the God path, this in itself could be described as yet another self centred idea.
5) Your last part seems to me to be pure waffle. How on earth does one 'unite with the divine state' when there is no evidence that it exists at all. You might think you are doing so, and that might well be enough for you, but it has no significance in any objective sense.
You originally said that the' Christian approach has a slightly different logic'. I agree that the Christian approach is generally different, but not exactly logical at all. Then you said that the choice is between two deterministic systems.Finally you suggested that 'self sacrifice results in alignment with the latter'(God centred).
You tell me where the different logic applies? 'Alignment' is just another way of saying that you make a choice. hence the same logic must apply to that choice I.E.
Unless it is as the result of a deterministic system, then it has to be random.