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Claim: most religious people would do God's will if they knew it

A viewer wrote: "I think most religious people would absolutely do something if they knew it was of God or he was asking them to do so."

No. This is absolutely, positively false.

There are two potential positions from which a person can hold this opinion. One is a really bad place to be, where you are walking in open delusion to the darkness in yourself, ignoring the fact that you routinely rebel against God's voice to you. The other (which, for what it is worth, I think you are in) is where you personally honestly feel that you would "absolutely do something if [you] knew it was of God" and you generously project this same attitude onto others.

I can tell you from personal knowledge that Jesus was in the latter camp. Throughout his youth, he presumed other people had the same love in their hearts as he did. And every single day his spirit was crushed by the incessant waves of contrary evidence to that belief. Every interaction Jesus had with every single person in his life, every day of his life, consistent of the extension of greater love followed by a failure to fully receive. It was this incomprehensible volume of experience that fueled the following passage:

23 Now when he was in Jerusalem at the passover, in the feast day, many believed in his name, when they saw the miracles which he did.
24 But Jesus did not commit himself unto them, because he knew all men,
25 And needed not that any should testify of man: for he knew what was in man. (John 2)

As you develop a closer relationship to God, you will marvel at the examples you witness the reactions of mankind to the plainest manifestations of some increment of God to a person. The pattern is so prevalent and consistent that the following axiom can be truthfully stated: the greater the love, the more likely the rejection, and the greater the degree thereof. This flies in the face of what we would like to believe of ourselves, and yet it is absolutely true.

Evidence is not the problem. The lack of fruits is not the fault of the seeds. There are plenty of seeds. It is the condition of the ground. The hearts of men are so much more wicked that anyone seems to believe, simply because their desires for self-protection (read: delusion) cause them to walk in lifestyles that keep everything shallow enough to maintain the illusion. They never see the depths of evil, because they never give the depths of love. 

A person cannot walk into any semblance of God's love without giving their whole soul in projecting that love into every aspect of their lives possible, and a person cannot shine any degree of the love of God toward other humans without quickly discovering just how evil most are.

Truly, the natural man is an enemy of God, and will be forever and ever, until and unless they choose to yield to the Holy Spirit. And a person calling themself religious does not divorce them from their nature. In fact, almost everyone who chooses religion does so as a way to feel less guilty while remaining the same fallen person they were before, not from a desire to crucify their nature by taking upon themselves the character of Christ.

The Pharisees had sufficient evidence to prove that Jesus was the Christ. They had substantial evidence to show he was a prophet greater than any they or their ancestors had ever known. They had absolutely overwhelming evidence that Jesus was a good person and better than any of them. And they nailed him to a cross because they felt that if they didn't, their priestly privilege or tenuous Roman stability would be removed. And they lost both, anyway, shortly thereafter.

If you believe most religious people would do God's will if they knew it, I invite you to begin loving people like Jesus did. When they begin nailing you to crosses in response to the love you show them, you will change your mind.