Dear Stranger,
At the very heart That was my question, and your reply is a gloss over of all the things you think are wrong, no depth to your reply, a typical ( as our Vlad is fond of saying ) Dawkinsian reply.
The idea of a god that is just, fair, and loving is a direct contradiction to the idea that humans all (except for one, who was god incarnate, so doesn't really count) stand condemned by said god for being 'sinners' and that we all need 'saving' by accepting the Jesus' sacrifice (dying for our sins and all that malarkey) by believing or 'having faith'.
We are all sinners, but lets take religion out of the equation, none of us is perfect, we all suffer ( to a man woman and child ) from greed, jealousy, envy, hatred,
at the very heart of Christianity we are taught to guard against these sins, these imperfections, Christians have Our Lord as a template, we try to behave as near to him and his teachings as is humanly possible, being a Christian is no get out clause, but I do agree with you that there are some Christians who do think this way.
The point being that if 100% of people fail a test, then it cannot possibly be said to be a fair and appropriate test for people. It cannot be a realistic choice for people to live up to god's standard (otherwise at least some people would do so). Condemning us for something we have no choice about is unjust and unfair.
A test, life is a bloody test, from the minute you are born until the day you shuffle off, it is all about how you deal with that test, the Bible is littered with stories about how we deal with that, The Prodigal son, poor old Job, Ecclesiastes.
In short, if god was going to make a people and then test them against some standard, it should have made better people or devised a more realistic test.
Make better people, a more realistic test, I honestly don't know how to answer this one.
Some Christians further compound the injustice of it all by blaming "original sin" - some couple eating the wrong fruit long ago (or whatever that story is supposed to represent) that somehow (but undoubtedly due to a choice of this god) turned us all into 'sinners' - which is even more unjust and unfair.
Aye some! But original sin is a crock, and then you witter on about the Adam and Eve Myth, that story is there to make you think, think deeply about the condition of man, other Myths are available, but as usual this one is brought up time and time again, why because you don't want to study and read the Bible, you just want to gloss over.
ETA: Oh and then there's the fact that even if all this is true - then it is a further injustice that there is no clear and unmistakeable message from god that warns us of it. All we have is one religion, divided into many sects, cults and denominations, amongst many others, which in turn are just one set of superstitions amongst many more. All without any objective indication that it is true...
No unmistakable message, well what I see,
at the very heart of Christianity is to fight injustice, to guard against greed, Love for our fellow man, compassion, to take a good hard look at ourselves before we start pointing the finger at others.
You would find this out yourself, if you stopped looking at all the negatives and started exploring the good.
Gonnagle.