Vesper, being a christian may not be your choice but engaging in religious activities is.
Wrong analogy. Becoming a christian (being baptized) is sometimes indeed not our choice, but our parents' one, but turning your heart to God, thus becoming an active Christian, is a personal choice. Therefore your "BS" argument is based on a false assumption.
Besides, how the hell is my activites any concern of yours.
I'm not looking or willing to look under your blanket, I'm just stating homosexual actions as sinful, basing on the Bible. You reject these arguments, so I don't need to care more of you and your kin - I just warn. I think that in your life I won't be the only one who will warn you of this being sinful, but I will also pray for your salvation, as this is the best thing I can do.
Speak on our level (logic, reason, proof) if you want to convince us of anything.
I have tried, if you look 60 pages back in this topic, but I have found that God can't be either proven or disproven by binary logic, thus making any attempt of talking on this level fruitless. You can still object this.
"1 in a ?!?!?!" would be better and I honestly do not want to follow and focus on that too much.
okay, 2.49e-23 is 1 in 4e+22, that's 1 in 40 sextillions that you'll catch a meteorite within 10 next seconds. 3.55e-4516 is 1 in 2.8e+4515 (too high for a reasonable name) for Fatima's miracle to be a pure coincidence.
So what about the people who've never heard the name Jesus, the word creation or the meaning of faith?
This we don't know. However God said "If you were blind, you would have no guilt; but now that you say, `We see,' your guilt remains" Jn 9:41. This also means that those who have never seen the light are "blind" in this context, so they don't have sins against the Lord. They, however, have their own conscience, and if it blames them of something bad they have done, and they don't repent on this (to their own conscience), they might end up in Hell. Otherwise their destiny is yet unknown, our teaching does say they can still be saved by God's mercy.
But I think the point is what seems the most logical?
No, there are either logical on non-logical things in the world of logic. Once probability is added, you can only state something with a certain probability, which in fact never reaches zero or one, since some of the initial assumptions have probability to be true. You can, however, measure these conclusions by probability, but this won't make some "more logical" than other, only "more probable".
and have to pay for our sins which we didn't do fully consciously?
See, there are two categories of sin. "Mortal" sin, if commintted and not repented, leads you to Hell. But in order for you to commit a mortal sin, you have to be aware of the deed you're about to do is sin, this deed concerns "hard matter" (direct deed against any of the commandments) and you have to do a free choice to commit that deed despite it being a sin. By "free choice" I mean that if you are forced to do something that's a mortal sin by someone else, your personal guilt is either eliminated or greatly reduced, up to the point of this sin not being mortal for you. There are also "common", non-mortal sins, that don't lead you directly to Hell if unrepented. So in case of you being unaware that something you did was a sin, this deed will not make you end up in Hell.
And don't tell me that god is telling some persons what is right and what is wrong
I'm speaking of conscience, this is a means for God to contact us and tell us what is right and what is wrong.
How is it our fault for sinning if we were made to be faulty?
Read above for mortal sin. And, being imperfect does not mean that we are being faulty, it only means that we CAN fail, not that we MUST fail. Yes, sometimes we can choose wrong, but there are means for God to tell us we did wrong so we will return to doing right.
how could an angel make a bad decision if they were made perfect?
I have no answer on this.
So it really doesn't matter if I believe in God or not or even what sins I commit so long as I have someone going or in Heaven who will prayer for me to get in?
Why, it does matter. If you repeatedly avoid any invitations, you won't enter Heaven. A prayer, even of a saint in Heaven, is a request for God to give you chances to convert, and it's up to God to choose the form of this invitation. He can indeed visit you as He did with Apostle Paul, or He can send you a vision of your sins you have already done, what harm did their consequences cause in the world and other stuff, in an attempt to convince you to throw your sinful habits (if any - I'm not to say you have any right now) away and turn your face and heart to Him. Most often He sends some smaller events to help a sinner to convert.
So God intended for us to sin?
Yes I think. Children can make mistakes, and sin is a classification of a mistake here. God sees us as His children (at least those who were baptized thus being embraced by Christ) and cares for us in a manner exceeding any that a mortal father could care for his children. But while we're yet here, we have a choice open to repent for our sins, or in terms of a child and father, ask forgiveness for his mistakes and promise he won't commit them further, and He as a loving father will pardon us.
put the temptation in the way
Placing a forbidden object is not equal to placing a temptation to use it.