i think you are contradicting yourself when you repeatedly ask for signs of miracles as proof and then say "er...no, that wasn't at all what my point was."
anyway, this is how jesus responded to such an approach. after feeding 4000 with 7 loaves, mark 8:11-12:
11 The Pharisees came and began to question Jesus. To test him, they asked him for a sign from heaven. 12 He sighed deeply and said, Why does this generation ask for a sign? Truly I tell you, no sign will be given to it.
you are also repeatedly overlooking my point that healing an illness in a temporary body, or feeding a hungry person for one day, is clearly seen by jesus to be a compassionate act of getting the minds of people off carnality so they may be taught more spiritual, eternal lessons. there has to come a point where you stop viewing god as a miracle vending machine or that he should endlessly give a person a fish. one either learns the lesson and no longer depends on the miracles, or the miracles are wasted in the bigger picture and the sign is no longer given since they are pointless.
the "power of love" commentary i gave a few posts back was never a claim that only christians have this ability or that it is christianity's only testament. it was a statement that christians should carry out christ's commissions instead of getting hung up on a doctrine of miracles. i think you may have deliberately misused the context of what i said to make your own points.
Well, if God was all-powerful, it wouldn't cost him anything to, say, write "Jehova" in the sky, after getting a few prophets to spread the word that he was going to. The fact that he doesn't do something like this is surely a sign that he's not particularly bothered about sending people to Hell. Note that this isn't forcing people to love him, it's just revealing he's out there.
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