aChristian,
We can tell our children that they are not allowed to cross the street. That does not make it wrong for us to cross the street.
If Hitler stood before a court of law for the atrocities of murdering killing the first born of an entire nation because he wanted to show how all-powerful he was, most of us would see that as the worst crime committed by any person. However, you're saying God can do the same thing and it's not a crime. The all-loving God can do despicable things, and it's dismissed by Christians with less than a jaywalking ticket!
A crime is never a crime if God does it because He can fix it, is the other argument. He gives life, and as the giver of life, God cannot be accused of killing or murder. I'll remind the judge living two doors from me that a mother can never be accused of killing her children because she gave them life. I'm sure he'll see the error of his ways.
However, the mother could use the argument "I can replace the kids I killed with other kids." It's a little like robbing a bank and returning the money the next day for a reduced sentence. That might work if you're God, but humans are held to a higher standard.
The argument that God can kill but it's okay because He can bring the person back to life is based on fantasy. Yes, I know scripture speaks of such things, but the fact is this; God has not demonstrated to anyone reading this post that He can do that or that He is interested in doing that. Just because someone wrote about it, and years later someone else called it a holy book, doesn't make the stuff written true. The fact is, none of us has ever witnessed someone raised from the dead. If Hilter said, "I'll resurrect the 6,000,000 people I killed in the New System a few thousand years from now"--I don't think anyone would buy his lunacy.
Bottom line Mike; I'm not trying to prove God doesn't exist, that is not my responsibility or goal in life. I'm an Agnostic, not because I don't want to believe--I'm an Agnostic because believers give me little reason to believe.
--JAVA
counting time at the Coffee Shop