In reply to Fletch1:
You asked how somebody who has read (and understood) the bible can still reject what it says. You also state that the Judeo-Christian god wants the best for all people.
You've rectified some important questions that many people have when they read the bible and incorporated them into your faith.
For me, the real question in that is if salvation only comes through Jesus, what happened to all of the people before that? Were they not good enough to be saved? Why punish people for being... well, people? If god is omniscient, he had to know we were going to eat the fruit- that is a rookie, first time parent mistake. Free will is a thing like that, and all children learn what not to do by doing. Heck, the entity known as satan was called the Adversary not because he fell and was working against god, but because god had set him to that task.
So much changed in the Council of Nicea it isn't funny. So much before that was lost in translation it isn't funny.
More importantly, why design such a rigged, broken system in the first place?
Additionally, how can different cultures all claim to be exactly and perfectly right about their gods being the only correct and true ones, etc. Popularity doesn't equal truth or quality among humans, I have only to point to Kei$ha to show that to be a fallacy. So who is right? Is everybody right? Who can say?
I was never able to answer these questions. More to the point, I will never be able to. Perhaps the message has had too much noise put into it by human authors, perhaps I'm missing the part of the brain that enables belief, I have no idea.
I'll just try to be a good person and a good father to my kids. Some days I'll do a good job at both, some days I'll fail. No matter what, though, it's on me and my responsibility. That and the fact I only get one shot at it makes me want to strive to do the best job I can.
If I'm wrong about everything (and who knows, I've been wrong about enough before) I'll certainly be surprised.