No, God is not responsible for human free will choices and actions because God does not think or act for humans. God designed us with a mind and free will so we could think and act for ourselves.
... but knowing what the outcome of our choices would be, which makes him responsible.
God revealed teachings and laws so humans could make the right moral choices. God bears no responsibility for humans who choose not to follow those teachings and laws.
Of course he does.
If what you're saying were true, then any time someone didn't follow God's teachings, this would mean that there's a problem with:
- the design of the students (which is solely God's responsibility)
- the material being taught (again, God)
- the way the material was delivered (again, God)
And it's not just a matter of moral choices. Take this recent bridge collapse in Mexico:
Mexico City: Metro train bridge collapse leaves several dead | DW | 04.05.2021
23 dead (so far), dozens injured. Did God know how bad the bridge's condition was? If not, why not? If he did, why didn't he tell anyone?
If you can’t come up with another way why do you think God could have?
Why not just take over the job of being God?
I meant that the idea that preventing someone from doing something makes the person a "robot" is nonsense. When someone intervenes to stop a murder, that doesn't make the would-be murderer a "robot" somehow.
God is not responsible for human free will choices just because God gave man free will. If a car manufacturer designs a car that can go up to 120 MPH that does not mean that that the car manufacturer is responsible for people who CHOOSE to drive way over the speed limit and cause accidents that kill people on the road. Nobody would blame the car manufacturer so why do atheists blame God for what humans CHOOSE to do with their free will? How utterly illogical.
There have been lawsuits focused on that exact point. IIRC, they generally lose because the car manufacturer wasn't aware - and couldn't be expected to be aware - that the person who killed someone with their car would use the car that way on that particular day.
It won’t work to say that since God is all-knowing God knew the driver’s plans so God should have stopped the driver from driving too fast… Why should God do that when people are perfectly capable of doing that for themselves?
Because any decent person who knew what the driver was about to do and was able to stop him would do so. I'm only applying the same standard to God that I'd apply to a person.
Now... because we're limited, fallible humans, we often aren't aware of misfortune before it happens or aren't physically capable stopping it. You agreed that neither of limitations applies to God.
We all do - or ought to do - only what we can to make the world better, or at least stop it from getting worse. It's just that with a God, "what we can" is a heck of a lot.
Why should God take over everyone’s mind and free will and do everything for them? This is petulantly childish.
God, if he were real, would need to intervene from time to time for the same reason a person would take a drunk's keys or call them a cab: basic morality and ethics.