Hmm, most of those examples aren't real people, they are gods. One thing we can be sure about was that Jesus was a real person.
Most. For Jesus to be considered divine, a god, or son of god. He had to fulfil certain prophecies. I agree though, he was only a real person, unable to convert the most important man in his life and the life of the Jews.
As to what Christianity gives you that you're not getting, well it gives you a relationship with God, which if Christianity is correct will give you an eternity of unimaginable joy and love. You can't save yourself from death forever, only God can. It isn't about being strong willed or coping with things. That's what atheists don't seem to understand. My faith doesn't really give me much relief from fear, of death or pain and suffering. Even Jesus was afraid of death, when he went to pray on the eve of his death and begged God to find another way and spare him death. Unfortunately there was no other way. The prospect of living forever scares me just as much as dying if I'm honest.[/QUOTE]Any religion worth it's being has to promise an afterlife to the troops it sends into battle, to those who have nothing, and asked to give more to the church.
So why is Christianity, with all it's different versions the only way into this afterlife? I'm assuming all the Christians who claim their sect of Christianity is the only right one. Are lying. I must tell that to the Mormon, Seventh Day Adventist, Joshua Witness followers who keep telling me only they have it right. Much like the Catholics did with anyone who disagreed.
That's not strictly true. Yes God chose an otherwise insignificant tribe to be his chosen people for a specific time period, but Jesus came to save everyone, not just the chosen people. It was in fact those chosen people that executed him!
I also don't think God gets upset and punishes people, that is just one way of looking at it. The other way to look at it is that God saw the horrific things people were doing for hundreds of years and finally said enough was enough. He intervened to end that suffering and put humanity back on track. That's exactly the sort of thing you have been arguing God should be doing, yet when he has done it for example with the Canaanites (who were a far worse tribe than the likes of ISIS) you accuse him of being a petty and vindictive. There is a disconnect here in your arguments.
Then he was in the wrong place to convert everyone.
As for god intervening to end that suffering and put humanity back on track, did he fail? As for your excuse on killing the Canaanite. That's wrong, read the bible.
"One thing we can be sure about was that Jesus was a real person." - I'm not so sure. I have reasons why I doubt Jesus was a real person in any meaningful sense - but this is not the thread to debate that.
"Even Jesus was afraid of death, when he went to pray on the eve of his death and begged God to find another way and spare him death" - Isn't that Mark's account? As I recall John has him pretty much has him pretty passive throughout.
"Unfortunately there was no other way" So you don't believe the deity to be all powerful then but one that is constrained in some way?
If Jesus was divine, converting Pilate or getting down from the cross then converting everyone. Would of had a bigger effect than the resurrection. Appearing in Rome and converting the leaders of Rome, would of saved 350 years of hard work.
As you say Jesus was constrained by being mortal. He's actually quoted as being here to save Jews, not the rest of us.
As a mortal his achievements are unprecedented. As a god for all, they fall short. I hold a god who can create the world, flood it, inflict plagues, destroy cities, walls, etc. Powerful enough to know if one needs to convert all the people, one has to go to the engine. The the rear carriage.
At the time of Adam and Eve, Mesopotamia was the place to be. But that wasn't the first real birth of religion,
that goes a lot further back. And even they were just to construct building to maintain existing religions.
Paleolithic religion.
Either god created all these, or man did.