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Yes, I understand your reasoning; they are like the same thing.
I think the difference lies in: if the literal reality is that there is a God, (as in, God's existence isn't dependent in any way on our belief in that God - God's existence isn't just a thought or held belief), then, there is literal purpose, rather than no purpose. (Of course, depending on the God which hypothetically is real - one could also consider frameworks where there is a God, but still no purpose for us, etc.)
In the framework where there is nothing beyond the observable physical universe, which is bound to die in heat death etc, then: one belief over the other has no weight upon which to rest, if that makes sense - like, nothing matters, even what you believe or what I believe, and while one can sort of intuit (for some reason) that living well is better than just keeling over and dying for no reason, there is literally no argument for not doing so; and if one person "floats their boat" via religion while another finds reason to carry on just by "sheer willpower (?)" then, well, whoop-de-doo - our atoms are going to be scattered apart in billions of years from now either way, and whether we do one thing or another will influence that scattering in such insignificant ways that like... who cares. But whatever, I think you get it.
Even if I grant the existence of a god, it doens't follow that we automatically inherit or comprehend that purpose. A deity might exist, yet leave you morally and existentially autonomous (aka anyone who isn't claiming to be literally hearing god speak to them) in which case 'literal purpose' claim collapses into a semantic trick.
Trying to break that down to simpler:
1. God exists, therefore life has literal purpose.
2. Problem: Even if a god exists, there's no gaurantee that we know, understand or participate in this 'divine purpose'. The word 'purpose' here just becomes a word you're applying to reality, not an objective feature you can verify or interact with. You're still stuck in nihilist hell.
3. In contrast, wes can create and experience meaningful purpose through decisions, projects, and relationships, independent of whether a god exists. No god needed!
Saying god gives literal purpose is like saying 'the universe is blue', but then never showing any way to detect the blueness. It sounds profound but has no operative content.
From the atheist point of view, meaning and value are arising from us - conscious human beings - our goals, relationships and reasoning. Cosmic indifference does not negate this. It just means purpose is emergent, not assigned.
Just because the question of our OBJECTIVE purpose might be unknown or even unknowable, doesn't change the fact that our SUBJECTIVE purpose is undeniable. Even if the universe is indifferent, our experiences aren't.
If you decide to posit ANY type of God or "thing outside our universe," then you could concoct an infinite number of ways in which living in eternity would be great, and not fall into any of those pitfalls. I think you're considering an eternity with some limits; like, yes - if in eternity we are pretty much the same as we are now but just literally never die, and, if there are only a finite number of things which can happen, or an infinite with only small variations from the stuff already experienced in the past - then yes, of course that would eventually turn into repetitive hell.
But, you could easily posit some other things - like, there are forever an infinite number of literal new things to experience, for eternity. Idk.
Problem with this "imagine a god who makes eternity endlessly enjoyable" is you are doing exactly what you are saying about the Islam 50 virgins thing - literally wishful thinking. Pure speculation, not grounded in evidence, theology or reason.
Avoiding repetition doesn't solve the underlying issue. Even if there are infinite experiences, that doesn't gaurantee meaning, agency or personal growth. Your life's signifiance is still measured against an infinite backdrop. Everything you value would beecome negligible of trivial if it lasts forever.
You also have to consider the anthropocentric bias. Human cognition evolved for FINITE lifespans. Infinite duration may be incoherent to us. I kind of notice this in my own life. With our vast lifespans now, there's this depressing realisation I have that so much of my own life is literally lost to the failings of my own memory. In heaven-land god would need to completely change your consciousness to even be able to properly 'live' in infinity.
Edit: Also I want to point out something a little funny: While the potential for free will relies necessarily on something existing beyond/outside the scope of our universe (e.g. God), and while I do believe in God - the existense of God does NOT necessarily imply that we must also have free will, and in fact I don't actually believe we have free will (in a certain sense), so I'm kind of back in to the belief of not having free will one would have if there was no God in the first place, albeit I arrive there from a totally different angle.
That's fair, but that is exactly my point: once god is introduced, none of the core problems are resolved. They're just outsourced to a higher level.
"Free will relies necessarily on something existing beyond/outside the scope of our universe". This is begging the question fallacy though. You're assuming nothing within the natural universe could support free will (exactly my position) = therefore god. I would simply say, no divine agency needed at all. There is no free will.