This is just a fun and intentionally provocative blog for me.
I do know theology quite well, both in the Eastern tradition and among the great Christian theologians from Augustine to Peter Abelard up to and including Paul Tillich.
What I find missing is an issue that would be of importance to contemporary atheists.
The question is 'What is to be done about the injustice of evil people?' For example, Saddam Hussein bought wood chipping machines after he saw the movie Fargo so he could put his political enemies into the machines. (Head or feet first?) His son Uday was considered to be even more cruel than Saddam.
Do we live in a world where people like this just die and the horrible pain and suffering they personally created is irrelevant. I didn't pick Stalin or Mao as my examples. I picked Saddam Hussein who personally inflicted the torture on others.
Dante, for literary purposes, created the description of multiple hells, much like the images from Bruegel a few centuries later. These were popular images of an afterlife for horrible people.
Modern religion has an all loving God who couldn't possibly operate and maintain such conceptual nightmares.
So how does one's sense of injustice yet resolved in an atheist theology?
The second provocative question is simply to ask how a god could make a covenant with the Jews 3,000 years ago and then we see the Jews, uniquely among all people in the world, having survived every effort to destroy them. The Jews (we) have survived longer than any other coherent nation. Survived an inconceivable level of enduring hatred. Is the answer that there must be a God or that there is a unique God who looks after the Jews?
I don't expect my readers to spend any time thinking about these provocations, I just felt compelled to present them.