Read this:
What is Wrong with Pascal's Wager?
Note:
"The problem with Pascal's wager is that the assumption that belief in God is sufficient to get one into heaven is false. Demons believe and are condemned. An intellectual belief simply in God's existence is not sufficient for entry into heaven. One must agree with God and accept His terms for salvation. After all, heaven is a place where we voluntarily give up our "right" to sin, to spend eternity with the Holy One, who will turn us into perfect creatures because of our commitments made on earth. However, if you are living your life based upon pretending to believe in God to escape from hell, this is not a good wager, since God will not accept pretense as a substitute for true faith."
And that's from a purely Christian perspective. Atheists have a different one. Which makes it, I think, important to differentiate between
knowing Christianity to be true and
showing Christianity to be true as William Lane Craig pointed out in 'Reasonable Faith."
As a quick example, Dodwell and Plantinga state that one way we know Christianity is true is through the self-authenticating witness of God’s Holy Spirit... the experience of which is veridical and unmistakable allowing one to know and know with confidence that they are experiencing the Spirit of God as they are experiencing God himself.
As Craig states:
"Martin Luther correctly distinguished between what he called the magisterial and ministerial uses of reason. The magisterial use of reason occurs when reason stands over and above the gospel like a magistrate and judges it on the basis of argument and evidence.
The ministerial use of reason occurs when reason submits to and serves the gospel. In light of the Spirit’s witness, only the ministerial use of reason is legitimate. Philosophy is rightly the handmaid of theology. Reason is a tool to help us better understand and defend our faith; as Anselm put it, ours is a faith that seeks understanding.
A person who knows that Christianity is true on the basis of the witness of the Spirit may also have a sound apologetic which reinforces or confirms for him the Spirit’s witness, but it does not serve as the basis of his belief. If the arguments of natural theology and Christian evidences are successful, then Christian belief is warranted by such arguments and evidences for the person who grasps them, even if that person would still be warranted in their absence.
Such a person is doubly warranted in his Christian belief, in the sense that he enjoys two sources of warrant."
So yes, it's accurate to point out that given the human predicament of being cast into existence and facing either eternal annihilation or eternal wrath, the only reasonable course of action (if the God of the Bible is real and true) is to believe in and follow the God of the Bible correctly: “for if you win, you win all; if you lose, you lose nothing.”
However, remember who your audience is. Y
ou're talking with people void of the first source of warrant and arguing with you about the second.
Just saying.
if you are right, saying there is no God, ok you just die. If you are wrong you go to hell and suffer for ever and ever. Please keep an open mind about God, creation and Jesus. If you ask Jesus to be your Lord, and repent, you go to Heaven for eternity. THIS IS IMPORTANT. YOU DONT WANT TO SPEND ETERNITY IN HELL. God does not want you to, I don't want you to. I want to see you in Heaven