Working on a fairly length post... in the meantime,
Keep it civil, guys
edit: OK!
(Which is disproven by the fact it takes 3 as π)
At least know the verse when you say this...
1 Kings 7:23 (New International Version)
He made the Sea of cast metal, circular in shape, measuring ten cubits from rim to rim and five cubits high. It took a line of thirty cubits to measure around it.
Here's a link for the whole chapter in NIV translation:
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1 Kings+7&version=NIV If you have a different version you prefer, by all means share it. Anyway, notice the italized words describe the measurements differently. It doesn't use the word 'exactly' for the ten cubits and five cubits, but certainly doesn't use a non-specific term to describe those measurments. Then notice that it's different for the circumference of the Sea; a 29.XXX... cubit circle would in fact "take" a 30th cubit to measure around it but would not be 30 cubits.
By eating the fruit and knowing what is good and what is bad, the human has gained free will and, more importantly?, the ability to make moral decisions.
In doing so, however, they have lost their innocence, the innocence of being an animal. No longer can we do something claiming it is natural, because always, we can decide if we want to do it and also choose a less evil way, which we not always do.
Choosing to eat the fruit at all would be a moral decision. God told them not to, and they did it anyway.
Genesis 2:15-16
5 The LORD God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it. 16 And the LORD God commanded the man, "You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; 17 but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat of it you will surely die."
You and some friends go on a camping trip. You bring someone who's an expert on the plants, animals and other such of the area you're going to. You set up camp, then the expert points out a bush of delicious looking berries. "Whatever you do, don't eat those berries there. They
will kill you." Most people would follow his advice. Sure you could move the campsite somewhere else, but really, your group probably consists of people who are more than capable of making sensible decisions and wouldn't eat those berries.
Furthermore, it makes me doubt the intelligence of God. He emphasizes that they must not, under any circumstances, eat from that tree. Had he built a wall around it, or not even created the tree at all, this disaster wouldn't have happened.
Also, he created the humans. Shouldn't he have known that the human is naturally curious, or that the snake is treacherous and wrong? Is he not omniscient after all?
God being omniscient would not stop him from planting the tree. He would know full well that they would do that, but would let them do it because it would be their decision. Sure, Adam and Eve weren't told the full list of consequences from eating that fruit, but God himself telling them they would die should have been enough. In my example above, a fellow human being saying the same thing is enough. Or is it? Maybe you never met the expert until the day of the trip. Sure he acts very professional, but anyone can do that. Besides, you've been camping, you've read the books, you know a decent thing or two... in fact your friends know that too.
Why would your friends hire this guy to tell you what you already know? Would your friends even waste the money to hire a real expert anyway? Maybe he's really a fraud, he's sure been a big jerk the whole time, acting like he knew every plant and tree along the way. He didn't even say
how poisonous those berries were, maybe they're actually safe to eat and exeedingly delicious, but he and your friends don't want you have to any because there's not enough for everyone. Maybe you could try one... maybe smell it first, a little taste, if it tastes bad then just throw it away or make yourself throw up. Just a little taste won't hurt, right? After all, if it turns out that you're right and he's wrong, then you're even better than the train expert.
Hopefully that example was good enough. Adam and Eve were tempted, not forced. People can be tempted, but inevitably, it's their choice to say, spiral down to obesity when a walk every day and some dieting would improve their lives. Here's
Genesis 3. Read what the snake said... closely. His question in verse 1 has a huge exaggeration, then follows up with a half truth. Yes her eyes would be opened, and she wouldn't die immediately, just eventually. If God had never put the tree there, Adam and Eve would proabably try to find another way to rebel.
More importantly, however, God curses us from then on. Women must give birth under great pain and we must forever work for our food. It has been mutliple millenia since. This makes me doubt the good-will, kindness and love God has for us, shall he exist. Were any of us there when they picked the fruit, were we born when they made that fatal decision? Is this just?
True, that is not just. I'm personally irked about the Tiger Woods scandal for example. I'm pretty sure many Americans have secret girlfriends/boyfriends in addition to their spouses, have cheated several times, but then they turn around and get on Tiger Wood's back for doing the same thing. It's also unfair that the (American economy anyway) took a dive because of the bad decisions of a few (at least, that's what people say, they all seem to blame each other really), and it's unfair when people die of an easily curable disease in a civilized country just because their health care filed the wrong paperwork. But those few people had a choice, they could do the right thing or do what would only benefit them and hurt others.
And this is my personal belief, but I believe anyone could have taken Adam and Eve's place and would have eventually done the same thing. /Christian_doctrine Everyone sins, in different ways of course, but we believe that every time we, as people, as humans, sin, it reaffirms that we would have done the same thing many times over.
But then, there are a lot of accident related deaths. Car crashes, failing bolts, ropes snapping, you name it. These make no differences between Christians and Atheists or people of other religions, do they?
Why does God not prevent such accidents, which nobody is really guilty of?
There was a recent example of a mudslide in Italy - even the church was destroyed.
Is God so cold-hearted and cruel he eradicates an entire village to show us we're not believing enough?
Why does he not send a very much clearer message, like speaking to all villagers?
/nitpick For car crashes, I recall the words of my driving instructor, who was a police officer: "We don't call them accidents, we call them collisions. They aren't accidents, collisions happen because someone wasn't obeying the rules of the road." I stand by what he said, it makes a lot of logical sense. If an accident occured when everyone was following the rules... then the rules need to be changed before someone else gets hurt.
And I thought nobody was hurt during that mudslide? Maybe I'm thinking of the wrong one. The destruction of a church is no biggie for Christians really, sure it's a surprise, but we just move on... it's just another building. Hard to say if natural disasters are directly from God, nature taking its course, or humans being neglectful of nature.
Speaking to people and their interaction, another interesting subject.
In the Old Testament, God was very active. He spoke to people in person, whilst in the New Testament, God is already much less active, up to today, where there's nothing at all.
Nothing at all for you, that is. Christians report miracles all the time, revelations all the time, nobody believes us of course. Even people who say "I"ll believe if I see a miracle," then I tell them about miracles I've seen firsthand, and they still don't believe. I couldn't produce scientific proof on the spot though, there's certainly medical records that could prove it... I just don't have access to them.
In the Old Testament, God is cruel and unforgiving. There is a story in which one wants to count the population of Israel. Because God wants not that his people are counted, he kills 120'000, making the census wrong. He also let the man live, so he may be mocked.
Quit making me work so hard
tl;dr version: If you're going to talk about specific events in the Bible, at least know the verses involved...
Protip: If you're feeling the need to rationally and critically explain your faith, then you've missed the point of faith entirely.
Blind faith maybe. I don't have blind faith in God, I have personal proof and faith that makes up my faith :O