You show excellent logic in your question and it is often asked different ways, but the same idea. You also give a good alternative logical possible answer, with it being, just a descriptive “tale” enjoyed by the people to get a message across, but did not really happen.
Not exactly -- "enjoyment" isn't the point; the point is to convey a divine idea using a tool (human language) that simply isn't equipped to express it.
Consider the example I used earlier with Beethoven... to speak the "language" of music, you need a musical instrument... preferably the right one for the piece... You can't "speak" the Ninth Symphony, you can only play it -- preferably with a full orchestra.
You can use a lesser instrument to get the general idea across... you can play the Ninth on a kazoo, but would it really be the same?
Similarly, to speak the "divine" language, one would need a divine instrument... and we who are mere mortals and not gods simply do not have one... even if we accept some small measure of the divine by virtue of being made in God's image, that just gives us the kazoo; we still don't have the orchestra.
If we are going to have a tale about the Jews wandering in the wilderness forty years you are going to have to add a way for them to be fed.
But! Also, if I am going to write just any fictional story about my ancestors, they would be powerful, smart, strong, wonderful, victorious and very obedient to God.
This assumes that any such story is "just a fictional story" -- I make no such assumption. The Bible is not limited to being "complete truth" or "complete fiction"; there's an entire spectrum in between. The same can be true of any ancient (and not-so-ancient) writings; it's just a question of where it falls on the spectrum.
Your question is asking: “why does God save the lives of some and not everyone?”
Not quite -- I actually said I
didn't want one of those discussions. The bigger picture is this: The more we learn of history, science, medicine, etc., etc.... the less it all supports a literal and historically accurate Bible...
unless we start shoehorning a
lot more miracles in there, and assume that God's had His thumb on the cosmic scales all along.
I saw this all the time back when I debated over in the creation/evolution forum... so I thought it interesting to explore the concept of "miracle" as it already exists in the Bible... personally, I prefer a world with
fewer miracles... less headaches.
but you have to realize some things:
If you are not heaven bound death is something to fear, while death in and of itself is not bad, since it is the way good people go home and bad people quite doing bad stuff.
One way to look at it -- not quite the Biblical way, since Death is specifically "the last enemy that shall be destroyed," and such a worldview raises some equally awkward questions regarding who's "good" and who's "bad." But let's continue.
It is extremely unfortunate, but I along with others need to realize God can stop providing life at any time.
Many of us already realize this, belief in God or not.
In the words of James Douglas Morrison, "the future's uncertain and the end is always near."
If I knew I was going to live for 100 years I might put off my turning to God, since before becoming a Christian the perceived pleasures of sin attracted me and I would have put off repenting. One of the problems with “waiting” is it does not get any easier to repent. If I turn away from wanting to be Loved unconditionally and to have that type of Love for others and seek being loved by others for the way I want them to perceive me to be, I might never turn.
On the flip side, you might turn too early... and too often.
In the words of Anton Szandor LaVey, “On Saturday night, I would see men lusting after half-naked girls dancing at the carnival, and on Sunday morning when I was playing organ for tent-show evangelists at the other end of the carnival lot, I would see these same men sitting in the pews with their wives and children, asking God to forgive them and purge them of carnal desires. And the next Saturday they'd be back at the carnival or some other place of indulgence."
This messed up world is actually the very best place for willing individuals to fulfill their earthly objective. God is doing or allowing all He can to help willing individuals to fulfill their earthly objective and that all includes: Christ going to the cross, satan roaming the earth, tragedies of all kinds, death, hell, and even sinning.
The notion of God "allowing" sinning is a strange one, since I define "sin" as an act in disobedience to God... but is it really disobedience if He says "it's okay, I'll allow it"?
But sin is a topic for another time; this thread is about miracles.
Back to “Miracles”: if manna fell from heaven today and we could not explain it scientifically we would know the God of the Bible truly existed,
That would be a God-of-the-gaps theology, and it's a theologically shaky position to take. Anything we can't explain scientifically
today we might figure out
tomorrow... and where does God go then?
In fact, our world is full of things we couldn't explain
yesterday that make perfect sense
today... what has that done to God?
Answer: Nothing... to
God, but it's put His followers in a tizzy. Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Newton, Franklin, Darwin, Freud... every time someone has opened the door to the unknown, there have always been those desperate to slam it shut "in the name of God." So let's not worship the gaps in our knowledge on the assumption that God's in there... somewhere
.
but that means we would not have “faith” in God’s existence, but knowledge of God’s existence. The problem is we need “faith” which is a humbling experience, since the lowliest person on earth can believe in a benevolent Creator and not knowledge of His existence since knowledge tends to puff a person up and push faith to the side.
That can happen, but my observations have been quite the opposite. Again, I'm drawing on my experience over in the Creation/Evolution forums...
On the one hand, There is a Creator who spent six painstaking days on this one little planet, and *POOF*ed the rest of the cosmos into being with little more than an idle thought... all for
you to have dominion over... because
you are the most important thing in His creation.
On the other, the more we learn, the more we know, the more we see that each answer raises a dozen new questions, and as we try to wrap our heads around creation, we see, in the words of Douglas Noel Adams, "you are given just one momentary glimpse of the entire unimaginable infinity of creation, and somewhere in it a tiny little marker, a microscopic dot on a microscopic dot, which says 'You are here.'”
One of those experiences is far more humbling than the other, IMO.