I’m saying that phrases like “God creating smallpox” are largely bollocks loaded and hysterical anti-theistic rhetorical devices. God creates matter and laws of nature with the potential for disease yes. God creates disease as the end in itself? No, what about the potential for good things.
1) No one, as far as I know, suggested that God creates disease as an end in itself.
2) Just because there are the potential for good things in this world is no excuse for creating diseases which lead to vast amounts of suffering.
3) Using emotive words like 'loaded', 'hysterical' and 'rhetorical' doesn't take away from the basic argument. Indeed, it seems to show your frustration at your inability in dealing with it.
Is god indifferent to suffering? No, hence the healing miracles. Is God going to overturn this laws of nature in a universal way for specific categories or eventualities? No.
You mean, by producing a few healing miracles from your holy book, you think that compares with, for instance, the estimated 300 million people who died from smallpox in the 20th century alone?('The eradication of smallpox – An overview of the past, present, and future' Donald Henderson). Really! And, your excuse? That your God ain't going to overturn the laws of nature which we assume He/She/It created in the first place. Strange indeed then that humans have done just that by eradicating the disease. Sounds to me as if you're describing a particularly cruel God who operates on the basis of whims and fleeting impulses.
Before the fall and indeed God’s will for mankind is unbroken communion with him which overcomes any considerations of physics. A return to paradisal condition is a yet to be realised event during our physical existence.
back to the idea of the fall, I see. It seems when all else fails, just suggest that humans are somehow responsible for all the ills that befall them. Doesn't wash with me, I'm afraid. Apart from the ludicrous idea of a 'fall', inherent in it is a total lack of the sort of morality which I support.