All of us? Not I. If a reward comes, I won't mind. But I don't choose my behaviors or beliefs in order to earn a reward. Ambition is a foreign concept to me.
OK, I'm sorry, I exclude you from that then. Most of us.
Many times I meet a random person, I'll say something, they say something back...and you know sometimes you meet someone and you say something else because they strike you as interesting. The reward is if they take the bait. Maybe a friendship results?
If we do something which enables several results, hoping for a particular result, that to me is a reward. If you are trying to a new recipie, you do it, and the reward will be the recipie turning into yum yum food. If you've never been to a person's house, and you've got sketchy directions, the reward will be getting there in a short order.
I have realized something, I may be taking the word *reward* and castrating it, just as you have taken the word *miracle* and done the same. If so, you don't need to call me on that, as I already have. Gulp.
As for ambition...people who know me describe me as unambitious. I'm just ambitious for other things that aren't quite apparent. Maybe in your case you are ambitious for something not of this world...let's take something like self-satisfaction, intellectual contentment, the ability to sleep at night. When achieved those are also rewards, and to a person like you or myself, they are greater rewards then a really nice car. Not that I'd have a problem if somebody ever gave me a really nice car.
As for biblical literalism, I assure you I've had "discussions" with a great many self-identified fundamentalist Christians who believed every single word in the Bible was written by God, PERIOD.
I dunno. Let me ask one tonight, I'll get back to you tomorrow. The person I'm going to ask is...well, I think she's a fundamentalist Christian, she goes to a bible church, she is skeptical of my Catholicism, and she reads the Bible every day. Here's what I'm going to ask. If God wrote the Bible, why do we call it the letter from Paul to the Ephesians? Did Paul not write the letter to the Ephesians, and if he didn't, why don't we call it the letter from God to the Ephesians? Are those two questions a good starter for this, or, would you suggest other questions?
-Elliot