I don't know if this makes sense, but I wanted to contribute but haven't much time to write:
Something “done properly” must be judged by the rules and purpose of an event. ...
Working within the parameters (i.e. given the Biblical claim that not every person will be saved) there must be a finite number of people who will be saved and a finite number who will not.
Given that either (1)God decided the parameters, or (2)man and not God decided those Biblical parameters, then God doesn't have to work within parameters - God can (1) decide to change the parameters or (2) ignore the parameters set by men.
In what way would “doing the whole thing properly” in 1972 or 1993 or 2011 indicate a better success in reaching that finite number than the finite number which has in fact been accomplished and will continue to be? (And in the year 3025 would not future-Gob wonder why such a primitive place as Australia and time such as 2011 was used when 3025 in Poughkeepsie would be so much better?)
Why does God only have to do this once, and why would he do it the way the Bible says he did it last time. Why can't he just every now and then do something pretty darn speactacular on a reasonably regular basis. Not the catholic church possible miracle level of spectacular, and not having Jesus born and die again - that may have sort of worked to some degree last time, but probably wouldn't be as convincing nowadays (and we don't nail people to crosses etc any more, at least not in Australia), but really show everyone that there is no mistake that he is God and he has a message.
Something (just as an idea - not that it has to be this) along the lines of a huge giant set of eyes appearing in the sky that would be seen worldwide, and a voice cutting through all our technology and across the skies speaking in any language anybody understands, simultaneously and yet as one, saying that he is God/Allah/someone like that, and here is his message. And maybe a giant hand reaching down to stop a flood here and save a few hundred people there, and turn one fish into food for an entire starving country, or something like that.
God could do something like that every hundred years or so, and then we'd probably all be believers.
In the group of “all people” some will not be swayed from their prejudiced opinions by any argument or evidence. If “doing the whole thing properly” means that “all people will be saved”, it would require the end of free-choice and a form of compulsion.
If God showed us something pretty spectacular and we all, by our own choice, ended up believing in him, then that would still be our free choice and our free will. I don't understand how universal belief has to be automatically be presumed to be compulsion. All God has to do is something really special, and then leave the choice up to us. That isn't compulsion, just offering us the choice with a more up to date and relevant reference.
I suppose it's the opposite to what we have now, when people are expected to have the choice with no obvious or visual reference except a very old and outdated book. I don't understand why God wants it all to be so mysterious, when he could very easily make it not mysterious.
Compulsion is not acceptable. If so, "done properly" must mean that while not all people would be saved, a larger finite number of people would be saved than the finite number that actually have been/are being/will be saved.
However, since the finite number of those who will actually be saved is not known and is not knowable, how can one know that a larger finite number would be saved if 33AD had not happened but 2011 had instead (or any date of choice)?
Therefore there is no better result than that which has been/is being/will be achieved.
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Why does God only want to save a finite number of people. If only the souls go to him and not the bodies, and he's all around and everywhere, how come he hasn't got the capacity to fit everyone in his Kingdom, if everyone begins believing in him?
He's God, so he could change his own 'rulebook' and save all of us, if he wanted to.
What higher purpose does he have for deliberately keeping everyone in the dark, and letting people have horrible crusades and wars that are all about him, and only doing a sort of sneaky hint about himself once a couple of thousand years ago and then never again?
He could boom down from heaven in a very direct way, if he wanted to, every time there are religious uprisings. He doesn't have to do it in some mysterious and open-to-interpretation way that we have to maybe guess a bit at. he's God. We shouldn't be fighting over which interpretation of him is the best - he could just tell us, and then we would all have a common understanding. And it would still be free will.