Vajradhara and Luecy7,
Brava, you are entitled to your own opinions. I believe what you two and I consider the meaning of "truth" and "fact" and "experience" and "beneficial" as something quite different from Lunitik. Some people just have to put blinkers on.
Consider this, I just read something by someone named Maitreya Ishwara (if I were enlightened I certainly would not choose something so pretentious--look up Theosophy and Krisnamurti and the Sanskirt). God is all-knowing, all pervasive, and there is no choice because it wirtes our tale. Dig, if the Universe is 14 billion years old and the number of particles is 10E+87, that is 10 to the power of 10 with 86 zeroes behind it (see Hitchikers Guide, "DON'T PANIC! Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly hugely mind-bogglingly big it is.") and each particles can transition every Planck time unit (10E-47 seconds... ditto DON'T PANIC, just know it is really, really small), then there are 8.0 E +118 (or there abouts-all it a Purvi, an archane Jain term for the age of the universe, my number is acually a little smaller) quantum events God would have had to preordian. That's if the standard model of QM is true. If the "many-worlds" theory of QM (or any of several technically related approaches), that becomes that many universes created from just this universe--which increases Gods planning to something like 1E 14000 preordained events.
The real simple choice is that Einstein was wrong, God does play dice,and those events are just that, events (interminate and indeterminable), like QM hypothesizes.
The point of all of this is that scientific method and logic and experience can be used to bound problems of metaphysics (and belief and spirituality, the topic of this forum) to lay bare the problems that unlie unsupported claim of subjective opinions. Now, the problem is do you believe one approach more than another, and do you hava ample justification for that?
For instance, the Greek translation of the Old Testament truely is flawed, and includes books which the Jews never accepted as canon. The Eastern Orthodox (and other groups like Ethiopeans and Oriental Orthodox) get around this by saying "the Lord made spoke directly to the 70 sages" (something attributed to a couple of non-Hebrew Jews, Philo and Jospephus). It is a matter of faith that the text is perfect. Fine, our Orthodox friends and I can define the terms so that out discussion is based on a knowledge of that each believe. No right, no wrong, just of difference of beliefs.