If what I'm saying is mockery to you, then I suggest you think about the issue some more. After all, you are the one believing in talking snakes and donkeys.
Well that really shows your level of knowledge doesn't it? It sounds like your source of information is Ricky Gervais. Again your mockery shows a lack of critical thinking.
What's more you've attacked Christianity and Judaism, but not YEC despite your opening post. I'm guessing you may not even know what evidence YEC put forward.
Uhm... think about what you are saying here. Jesus divided the bread by multiplying it? Perhaps I should have used an example in math where diving a smaller quantity makes the end result magnitudes larger than the initial substance you were dividing. Then it would NOT be mockery?
So, a Christian math goes like this.
(2 fish + 5 bread)/5,000 = 12 full baskets of food AND 5,000 people who were fed?
First and foremost I'm not saying any of the things you have attributed to me. Neither is anyone else that I've read so far, nor does the Bible say what you want it to say to enable your mockery. With each word it becomes clearer that you haven't actually thought the issue through.
As I've repeatedly pointed out using your mockery blinds you to your own prejudices. If your objection is to miracles, why not say that, why imply that Christians can't do mathematics when I suspect many of them have a far better grasp of the subject than you do (e.g. the previously mentioned John Lennox).
If your objection is against miracles then why even mention YEC? That seems a red herring and it makes you sound more confused about what you are objecting to.
If you were to use this reasoning on a philosophy paper, it would be sent back with an 'F'. Mocking an opponent's viewpoint is not the same as showing why it is wrong.
In a naturalistic world, when you are dividing something, you are NOT increasing whatever it is you are dividing. But, in a Christian world, you are doing the opposite.
This is a little better. You could have just typed this. It would have saved you a lot of typing and us a lot of reading and it sounds like a reasoned bit of thinking, whereas the rest is hyperbole.
To answer your question in a Christian world we are doing the same as everyone else. We are dividing up something and not increasing whatever we are dividing. If that were in the slightest way true, then Christians would all be millionaires while atheists would be totally poor.
What is more the Feeding of the 5,000 (the four thousand had more loaves if memory serves) is considered a miraculous event. It certainly isn't a normal one. If it were normal then it would not be remarkable.
So for you to dismiss it is going to take a whole lot more than 'it's bad mathematics'. I'd recommend Hume's 'Of Miracles' though I gather philosophers largely dismiss it as a poor argument nowadays, but it is a far better argument than yours.
And then you'd still have to explain why YEC is invalid.