Jesus was the Lamb that was slain from the foundation of the world.
That is another way of saying that before God began creating, it was already known and a part of the grand plan that Jesus would have to eventually die in our place.
From that alone I can conclude that your god is not a moral being.
If he would purposefully set up a world that he knew was going to fall, then plan to kill an innocent person to save a minority of people on that planet, while allowing the others to suffer eternal torment, then your god is a sadistic monster.
So yes it is true, if God had not created us then there would have been no need for Christ to die. If this is what you meant by your statement above, then you are correct.
If your god is all powerful, then he had the option to create us with absolutely no need for Christ to die.
If it was outside of his power to create a universe where Christ didn't have to die, that means that your god is not all powerful, and furthermore something other than your god is ultimately governing the rules by which this universe operates.
This in no way makes the evil men any less culpable for their actions though. They still chose to betray and murder an innocent man because they were jealous of Him.
Ok, so again, what does it say about your god to decide to send an innocent man to be murdered? That's no more moral than the actions of the men.
God knowing someone is going to do something before it happens does not mean that He causes them to do it. It just means He knows what they are going to do.
Well, not really. If god is all knowing, and knows what a person will do depending on how he chooses to create that person, then how that person is created will send him on an inevitable path.
In short, an omniscient creator and created people with free will are mutually exclusive ideas. If god wires your brain to work a certain way, you can not step outside of your natural thought patterns and choose a different path, it's impossible.
To illustrate, I know that if I give my children the choice to play with their toys or sit down and do their homework, they are going to choose to play with their toys. But just because I know they will make this choice doesn't mean that I cause them to play with their toys. They are the ones choosing, not me. They choose freely to play with the toys.
If you designed them knowing they will choose the toys given that choice, then their decision is ultimately a consequence of your design.
Furthermore, if you designed them in a way that they'd turn out to be people that loved doing homework, then their choice to want to do homework is also ultimately a consequence of your design.
God giving men the ability to make choices and to choose His will or their own is not evil. It is good. It is good to be free. It is good to be able to choose, is it not?
Except what you are describing is one of those logical impossibilities. If god has a master plan, and designs people knowing what their decisions will be, then free will is impossible.
For example, can everybody choose to not abide by god's master plan? If the answer is no, we have no free will. If the answer is yes, then god has no way to implement or enforce his master plan.
If you're going to bring up hell as a way of enforcing his master plan, then that eliminates free will as a possibility. God is now using coercion, which negates free will.
Is that not the rallying cry of the pro-choicers? Is that not the rallying cry of those in bondage and those under the yoke of tyranny?
Give us our freedom! We want the right to be free to choose to (fill in the blank)!
Is that not the rallying cry of those who want to be free from religious persecution and the influence of religion?
Is that not what you want? Freedom?
It is good to be free to choose. But if we are free to choose, then that means that some will choose evil.
I'm all for freedom, the problem is if your god exists, then we can never be truly free.
Christ was sent to atone for the sins of mankind and to show us who God is. So it is for these reasons, and a thousand and a thousand more, that Christ coming into this world was good.
Executing an innocent person to pay for the crimes of the guilty is an inherently immoral and unjust act. There is nothing good about it.
As the gentleman said earlier, it is a matter of perspective.
Personally, I can think of no better way that God could have procured salvation for us or a better way that He could have shown us how much He loved us than to go through what He did for us.
He could have said to everyone that they're forgiven without the need for all the bloodshed. That's a better way of doing it.
Has it not been written: No greater love has a man than this, to lay down his life for his friends.
If you slit your own throat as a way of forgiving someone, you're an idiot.
If you slit an innocent persons throat as a way of forgiving someone else, you're a monster.
Period.