Alright Skittles, here is my answer to the ones I haven't answered already.
Skittles! wrote: 1. Why do you believe it's a 'gift' that God has given us, and not a bribe? Sure, in the Bible, it may say that it's a gift, but the Bible has been translated time and time again that it may not be correct. What if it was a bribe? It'll just be like "Hey, follow me, and I'll give you eternal life". Why would God give us a 'gift' anyway?
This is a more complex question than it appears to be. You can mean more than one thing when you say “bribe”. For example, giving money to a mayor so that your inferior company gets a million dollar sanitation contract is a bribe. This is illegal because the populace gets shafted with bad sanitation, and I’m sure you’re aware of the rest of the implications. Suffice it to say this type of bribe is a bad thing. But we also have a parent bribing his children. For example, I’ll give you dessert if you finish your vegetables. Nobody gets shafted here. The vegetables are good for the kid, and the loving parent treats the kid for good behavior. Hopefully, this is also setting up a good habit of vegetable eating for later in life. Thankfully, this kind of bribe isn’t illegal, otherwise I’d probably writing this from jail. So there is bribing for personal gain and bribing in the best inerests of another, but they are hardly the same even though we use the same word.
Now, from my Christian perspective, God is on a rescue mission. Sure you could consider that the park ranger is bribing you by saying “follow me and I’ll lead you out of the woods”, but who cares you’re getting out of the woods. The firefighter could also be bribing you by saying “give me your hand and I’ll pull you out of there”, but once again I’d give her my hand because it’s in my best interest to do so. Now, if you’ll allow me a little guesswork I’ll try to think about where you might be going with this.
An omnipotent park ranger or firefighter wouldn’t need me to do anything, right? So, that would constitute toying with me and lead us to think of God as capricious and mean. There is a big problem with this reasoning. Omnipotence has a down side. God is limited a little by the fact that he is omnipotent. Strange thought, eh? It is, however, what almost every Christian has said and almost every atheist has refused to accept. An omnipotent God really only has three choices. Those choices are never intervene, intervene sometimes, or intervene all of the time? These really are the only options he has.
This leads us directly into the nature of God. I don’t like going here, but what the heck. The baby’s teething and I’m up in the middle of the night anyway. The first option gives us the blind watchmaker. God creates the world and walks away. That’s not the Christian God, and few people have said it is. So we can rule out that option. The third option is a God that “loves” us so much he wouldn’t let us do anything wrong. So we have a father who smothers his kids to the point that they are mindless zombies completely incapable of existing independently from him. Yes, I said that and believe it. People can exist independently from God. Christians call that Hell.
Finally, we come to the second option. God intervenes sometimes. Now there are two versions of this God. The atheist version goes something like this.
Neutrino wrote:God gives us free will, then imposes a huge number of seemingly nonsensical rules on us, just so when we choose to exercise the free will that he gave us and disobey these rules, he can jump out from behind a bush and yell "Ha ha!" and banish us to hell for all eternity.
Seems like a particularly sane and rational god you got there...
I agree, but this isn’t the God I believe in. Remember that whole gift - bribe thing? God is rescuing us, but to walk in and save everybody automatically means that he’s the option three “loving” god that forbids free-will. So the problem is who does he help? The one’s who ask for help.
Does God impose rules simply to jump out and damn the ones who don’t follow them? No, he gives directions, remember the park ranger? It’s our choice to follow him out of the woods or stay in there. If we ask for help, though, Christians believe that it will be given. God gives us directions on how to find him, and we believe Heaven is in his presence. We can choose not to follow those directions and not attempt to find him. By default that choice leads to not finding him (missing Heaven) which is in our belief means we've found Hell. If we choose to go to Heaven or Hell it’s our choice. Perhaps not the best explanation, but I see nothing insane about it.
Skittles! wrote: 3. (I've previously asked Caleb this, but I want other views by other Christians). Why did only 3 men go to Heaven? Moses, Ezelkiel (SP), and Abraham (if I remember correctly). All from the Old Testament, all under Yahweh.
Let's see why those three would of been the only ones to go to Heaven.
Moses - He freed the Israelites from the Egyptians, and led the to the land of Milk and Honey. (Which, even after freeing them, they didn't even get to

) He imposed the will of Yahweh to kill livestock, people, and to plague Egypt. Why, when it was just to save the Israelites? Sure, they were the followers of Yahweh, but they also pillaged, killed and drove other cultures into the ground, just so Yahweh was the only 'god'.
Abraham - He was the forefather of the line of which Jesus was born. He almost killed his Son in the name of Yahweh, and it was all to test his faith in the god. He did everything his god told him to.
Ezelkiel (SP) - He didn't send rain to some country or other, because they worshipped different gods other than Yahweh. Why would that get him into Heaven? It's inhumane, and not even logical that someone can command the weather like that.
Why would these three get into Heaven whilst the diciples of Jesus of Nazareth didn't get into Heaven? They started the New Testament, they started many Churches of Christianity. And why wasn't Paul? He even went to Rome to preach Christianity. Why wasn't anyone from the New Testament allowed into Heaven, when God was meant to be loving and different from the way He was before when he was called Yahweh.
It'll be nice if you answer them, and if it stregthens your faith, then I'll respect you even more.
I have read the Bible, but I have seen nothing in it that states this. You have missed Elijah who was bodily taken into Heaven in Elisha’s presence. There are certainly more non-Christians in Heaven than these three alone. As I said earlier, It’s been stated many times in this thread that non-Christians can be saved, but as I’m not a non-Christian I have no idea how. I’ll also not speculate on how this occurs.