And so 'you' assume, but you err, because any manipulation by god, however slight, as in the teachings of Jesus, any sort of direction whatsoever, is in fact determinism, negating freedom of choice. So why do you contradict yourself?
Non sequitur. It's not an assumption at all; it's a simple fact. Your conclusion does not follow from your premise. To illustrate, if I offer you alternatives, I'm not "determining" which you will take. Nothing there "negates" your freedom of choice...you just get additional information by which you may better inform a free choice. That is arguably better than if I did not add to you any information, since you would be more "determined" by an uniformed choice than by an informed one.
Not only are you saying that it is smarter that Jesus be killed as he was, but that you are just as smart as your god,
Non sequitur again. If I say I believe Einstein's Relativity to be accurate, that does not imply I'm as wise as Einstein.
you betray your god as being deterministic
Definitely not true, but if it were, so what? That would not prove determinism was not actually true. Personally, I think it's not; but your argument here won't prove that.
But if your case as presented above were true of anyone, then of course I would have to agree with you, if it were possible to prove that an entity like a god does indeed exist in the first place.
A fair and an honest answer. Well done.
he decides to be deterministic, not allowing free will, and intervenes either as or through Jesus, and the rest of the biblical characters
Again, if your first supposition at the top of this message is wrong, then so is all of this argument. Personally, I think it's wrong. It certainly does not follow as logically necessary. You'd have to provide some proof that God is, in fact, operating deterministically. I see none here.
You seem to assume that God owes everyone complete knowledge in precisely the same instant. I can't see how you're getting that assumption, and it's certainly very far from "self-evident."
Good then, I hope the same thing for this reply, as I see it as being just as benign. At least from my perspective.
No, that's fine. We're just discussing an idea, not picking on each other in a petty or personal way. We're doing dandy.
Of course I do, and you know that I do.
Then you've departed the rational on that point. To put it simply, "How can the fact that Tom doesn't know X prove Ellen doesn't know X?" Moreover, "How can the fact that Tom doesn't know X tell us anything about whether Ellen *can* know X?" Clearly, Tom's ignorance tells us nothing definitive about Ellen's knowledge or possibility of knowledge.
knowing" requires PROVING!
To whom? If Ellen can prove to herself that she knows the sum or 6+9, why does she need to be able to prove it to Tom in order for it to be true? What if Tom is a mathematical ignoramus, or if he just so hates maths that he refuses to think about it? Does Tom's obstinacy mean that Ellen cannot know 15?
Yet you don't understand, with so many gods, and ways of gods, which is right and which is wrong?
This is an excellent question. But far from being a problem for the concept "God," it's merely a starting point for better inquiry. If all gods are not God, then let's go find out which one IS God. That's the rational thing to do.
In truth in that time they took what was thought to be a very good idea, of the possibility of there being a god, and made it fit their agenda, namely to save themselves, against the fear of survival.
This may be true, at least in some cases. But it's not an argument against the existence of God, but an argument against leaving human beings to interpret God according to their personal wishes or desires or needs. I could not possibly agree with you more, in that case.
Two, I often speak in metaphor, expecting people to know how it applies.
I would advise against this. My reasoning is that metaphors are comparisons, and thus are never precisely the thing to which they allude. Moreover in metaphorical language people often take a different meaning than you intended -- which is fine for poetry, but useless for philosophy, as it puts you arguing different tracks and merely produces mutual frustration.
Thanks for the considerable effort put into your response. You have indeed clarified your position to me a bit.