Hey CDF... I may have asked this before, but what is it that you consider to be a god?
1- Some otherworldly king-like figure?
2- Some immaterial entity, but capable of interacting with the material world?
3- The philosopher's god, that which is a set of metaphysical properties, such as the property of existing, without which nothing can exist at all?
The way you speak, I'd wager number 1, with a hint at number 2.
But the most rational basis for the Christian religion lies in number 1... and, even that one requires the leap of logic where you have to assume that metaphysics is not a human construct.
1- Some otherworldly king-like figure?
2- Some immaterial entity, but capable of interacting with the material world?
3- The philosopher's god, that which is a set of metaphysical properties, such as the property of existing, without which nothing can exist at all?
The way you speak, I'd wager number 1, with a hint at number 2.
But the most rational basis for the Christian religion lies in number 1... and, even that one requires the leap of logic where you have to assume that metaphysics is not a human construct.