Effectively they are if they're born into a life with a sentence of "hell" hanging over them if they don't find the right path in one short existence.
They're not.
People are born innocent. If they die in their innocence, then they still have the opportunity, with full knowledge of His existence, of either accepting Him and loving Him, or hating Him and rejecting Him.
Or rather, just aren't convinced that one exists.
Which is still a rejection of God.
God exists, whether someone is convinced of that fact or not.
I think you'll find that many, if not most, atheists grew up with at least some knowledge of God. Turning to atheism because they were later taught that He doesn't exist, or taught that He might not or probably doesn't exist, is a rejection of Him.
Now, obviously, that doesn't mean that ALL atheists grew up that way, but one would be hard pressed to find someone in this world of 7.5 billion people in today's connected society who has never heard of God or Jesus Christ. Not impossible, by any means, but extremely difficult.
Which is why I said, at some level, it's a rejection of God even for those who have doubts.
Even Thomas needed proof that Jesus had risen from the dead, was he condemned for that?
Having doubts that someone you had grown to love had risen from the dead seems a little bit different than having doubts that the creator of the universe exists.
I'm gonna call non-sequitur on this one.
Humans have doubts, it's part of human nature and you might even find yourself having them at some point in life.
Of course people have doubts. I'm not saying, nor have I ever said, that people don't.
My question is why would someone reject the God who loves them enough to send His Son to die for them, to save them from eternal punishment.
Because setting things up in the way you believe requires God to have created the parameters before life was even born, knowing full well the foibles and fragility that would encapsulate human nature.
Which parameters? What did God know?
Do you think I'm a Calvinist? I've told you before, I'm not.
According to you, there's a loving God who created a realm of suffering for those who didn't find the "narrow path" in a handful of years on this plain.
Incorrect.
According to me (and I'm just telling you what the Bible says) there's a loving God who created a place for people to go who reject Him and break His law.