Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue May 20, 2025 9:07 pm
ThinkOfOne wrote: ↑Tue May 20, 2025 8:32 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri May 16, 2025 2:46 am
But that's what this thread is all about. Look at the heading. It's not about religion, it's about what happens to secularists with regard to morality.
Maybe it wasn't me who was off topic. But we can get back on. Do you have anything to offer about the actual subject of the thread?
You seem to have lost sight of how this played out.
No, I can see what the OP is. So can you, if you just look up.
In an attempt to lend Gary perspective I posted the following:
ThinkOfOne wrote: ↑Thu May 15, 2025 2:23 am
Fairly recently I was talking to a Buddhist who was telling me that he had started going to a Christian church which surprise me. So I asked him if he was aware of core beliefs such as: Jesus paid for their sins; no one can make themselves righteous; for all intents and purposes, God grants them forgiveness for the asking; their sins are not their fault - it is because of the fallen nature of man.
Your theology is wrong here, but you got the first part roughly correct. The second part, you missed completely. But we can fix that.
Christianity holds that your sins ARE your fault. And that unless you do something about that, by accepting the salvation that is in Jesus Christ, you will not escape the judgment of a righteous God. Therefore, it is incumbent upon you to do to things: first, to repent, which means to change your way of thinking, so as to change your whole orientation to the world (called "metanoia," in the Greek), and then to put your whole faith in the ability of God Himself to supply the judicial righteousness that you simply do not have. And then, as per Romans 12:1-2, to change your entire life afterward, so as to live for God.
The OP was remarkably ill-conceived.
And yet it's entirely true. And it's true in your own case, manifestly. You are an Atheist, no? Or at least a cynical agnostic, if not that. But what did you just do? You tried to moralize, though Atheism provides absolutely no basis for moralizing, and agnosticisms don't provide any information at all.

So not only is the OP well-conceived...it's clearly applicable to you, in the present moment.
If you think otherwise, explain what "other belief system" you are referring to for all your ethically-negative adjectives you try to apply to Christianity: which worldview justifies your value judgments?
I'll bet you have no answer.
Actually, I advocate for the gospel preached by Jesus.
With every post, you continue to show that you are either unable or unwilling to discuss this in good faith. As but one example, the way you repeatedly take a snippet from what I wrote out of context, create a straw man and attack it, whilst failing to address the main points. Even going so far as to underhandedly delete the main points from what you quote from posts of mine in an attempt to deceive others.
For the record, here is the entirety of one such post.
ThinkOfOne wrote: ↑Thu May 15, 2025 10:37 am
From what gather the only denominations that take the Bible so literally are Fundamentalist/Evangelical Christians. Most are sensible enough to take stories like you mentioned as allegory. From what I gather, IC is one such Christian. They often take words and redefine them in an attempt to get them to fit their worldview. In other words, they square-peg them. "See, it does fit". Other words that immediately come to mind are "righteousness", "repentance", "keep", "love" - the list goes on and on. What's more they square-peg things in lots of other ways: interpreting Bible verses/passages, the political views they hold and on and on. It's a dishonest worldview for dishonest people. They live in a morass of double standards and hypocrisy. A veritable factory for "white-washed tombs", if not "sheep in wolves clothing".
Fairly recently I was talking to a Buddhist who was telling me that he had started going to a Christian church which surprise me. So I asked him if he was aware of core beliefs such as: Jesus paid for their sins; no one can make themselves righteous; for all intents and purposes, God grants them forgiveness for the asking; their sins are not their fault - it is because of the fallen nature of man. HIs response? "Sounds like the makings for psychopaths". Which it is. Not that all or even many necessarily become psychopaths, but the makings are there all the same. I know one such individual personally. That said, this does beget a strong tendency toward extreme narcissism, selfishness/self-centeredness, dishonesty, hypocrisy, etc. When it comes down to it, they believe things are true because they believe them. I suspect that this is why so many of them are prone to demagoguery, racism, xenophobia, homophobia, transphobia, believing in conspiracy theories, etc.
I wrote the above with Christians such as yourself in mind.
Your theology is wrong here, but you got the first part roughly correct. The second part, you missed completely. But we can fix that.
Christianity holds that your sins ARE your fault. And that unless you do something about that, by accepting the salvation that is in Jesus Christ, you will not escape the judgment of a righteous God. Therefore, it is incumbent upon you to do to things: first, to repent, which means to change your way of thinking, so as to change your whole orientation to the world (called "metanoia," in the Greek), and then to put your whole faith in the ability of God Himself to supply the judicial righteousness that you simply do not have. And then, as per Romans 12:1-2, to change your entire life afterward, so as to live for God.
The above is a straw man as a response to the following statement: "their sins are not their fault - it is because of the fallen nature of man." From the context it is apparent that the word "their" is referring to Christians. NOT to people in general. Yet you responded as if it were referring to the latter.
Think about it. Why do Christians continue to commit sin
after "accepting the salvation that is in Jesus Christ"? Do not many Christians believe that because of "the fallen nature of man", they cannot cease to sin? How is that not an excuse for "their" continuing to commit sin? A way of shifting the blame for their sins to "the fallen nature of man"?
Put that with the other core beliefs that I cited, there's no escaping the fact that it does ""sound like the makings for psychopaths". It does "beget a strong tendency toward extreme narcissism, selfishness/self-centeredness, dishonesty, hypocrisy, etc." This is especially true of Fundamentalist / Evangelical Christians.
It's as if Jesus said the following with people such as yourself in mind:
Matthew 7
21“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. 22Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?’ 23Then I will tell them plainly, ‘I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!’
There's no reasonably escaping the fact that "evildoers" are those who commit sin. It is to them that Jesus says "I never knew you. Away from me".
They can say to Him "Lord, Lord" all they want. The can "prophesy in [His] name" and so on. It doesn't matter. So long as they continue to commit sin, it's as if Jesus never even knew them.
BTW, if you want to discuss "morality" in and of itself, then start a new thread on it. As part of the OP explicitly state on what you base your belief that Christians have a "basis for morality" while "atheists / agnostics" do not. Make your best case.