Hi Blue
As I understand, two claims of Christianity are:
1. There is a just God; and
2. This God so arranges things that those who believe His "offer" are privileged over those who don't regardless of the behaviours of either group.
Prima facie those two statements appear to be contradictory. My question therefore is about that contradiction, not about the texts that set it out.
Ok, then to my mind there are only three logical answers to your challenge
a) "he picks the believer, obviously. This is God's justice you moron, not some simpering, liberal, lily-livered human justice. Get over it and shut the hell up"
b) "You have a point... that Is a contradiction, but listen I have many reasons for my personal belief in God so rather than dismantle so much of what gives my life meaning, I'm just going to accept that I don't know and hope that God is merciful and would welcome both people in the name of true forgiveness"
c) "good question, but listen, scripture is not infallible and there are many ways to understand the message of Jesus, rather than through what is an unhelpful binary examination of who is in and who is out of heaven"
Now, it seems to me that you have had versions of all three of these answers over the course of the thread, and all three you (or others) have dismissed. 'A' simply reinforces your point, 'B' is a cop-out and 'C' ignores the plain meaning of the scripture (an argument used by fundamentalist believers I might add). You apparently set the rules here.
Fair enough
but it leaves me wondering what the point is. It seems like you would rather wrestle over religious theory than actually engage with the human dimension that originates those theories. You treat these ideas as if they are somehow detached from human life and emotion, which I find confusing. A less generous person might suspect that all you are interested in is intentionally laying traps to demonstrate the error of religious belief, which sounds entertaining but is ultimately hollow.
I might be wrong about all that, but reading the entire thread has left a somewhat bitter taste in my mouth, and I think this is why: Not that you are wrong, but simply that no one has said anything of any value. For my money any of those three answers is valid, but the interest lies in what they say about the people who give them, rather than a posited god that you nor I believe in anyway. 'A' is pretty horrific, not much else to say about that. 'B' is honest in its doubt, which at least takes courage and marks someone as willing to be flexible in how their personal beliefs interface with the real world. 'C' is the most interesting because it attempts to keep religion relevant within the wider modern context, rather than just the personal.
But I already know what your going to say - that these claims must be challenged if people ask for special treatment based on religion like seats in the Lords, lessons in our schools blah, blah blah. As if that justifies your own dogmatic position that drives you to repeat the same narrow questions over and over and over again. Its reductive. Like god, you present your own poisoned chalice, challenging people to agree with you or be paraded as fools. Either way you win. And that, in the end, is what makes this so unbearably dull.
I suspect what comes next is a pedantic evisceration of my post, point by point. Well, who am I to deny you your fun?
Enjoy