No its not like that, for the laws of the universe dont have an intelligence behind them. I am asking why there are only two options, why would i so called moral god punish someone for eternity just because someone could not believe something there is zero evidence for.
That statement has as much proof for it as our statement does: Just because you don’t discern an intelligence behind the laws of the universe does not mean there is one. That assertion is just as absurd as claiming dark matter doesn’t exist because you haven’t seen it. The belief that there is no Creator is the same as the belief that there is one. Your world view is just as belief based as ours.
You believe we were not created or intended. We are an accident and, as such, have no purpose. It is logical for you to deny any sort of conclusion to life because life has no intrinsic purpose if we are not created. It is also logical for you to believe that each human being makes of life what we will, because, lacking any sort of “factory pre-sets” we
must figure out our own reasons for being. If there is no God, there are no right answers, no wrong answers.
But all of that presupposes that there is no God, which you believe because you say you have found no proof. OK. Obviously there is proof to be had, for many of us (billions) have found reasons to believe, unless you suppose all of us to be unthinking, uncritical, unreasoning, or less intelligent than yourself. Of course, that is a possibility, but incredibly improbable. You have found no credible proof - how difficultly have you really looked? Have you allowed your hypothesis (there is no God) to influence your findings?
If there is a God and He created us, then we have an intrinsic purpose. We cannot choose to be anything we want because we have been created to be what we are. You cannot become a whale because you wish to be a whale: you will always remain a man because you were created a man and not a whale. If you were created, you are not a free spirit anymore than a fish can grow into a man.
If we were created, it is logical to ask “for what purpose?” - a question which will have one and only one answer, a question which will provide a baseline for what is right (fulfilling purpose) and what is wrong (not).
If we were created, there are only two answers.
If we don’t have free will, then we fulfill that purpose - we are hammers that cannot but choose to hit nails. If we do have free will and yet a specific purpose, then we choose whether or not we fulfill the reason for our creation or if we reject that reason. We