revsdd
Well-Known Member
I would suggest that it's very debatable whether even most Christians have "a belief in a God that they must obey." Some, perhaps, - mostly fundamentalists - but there is also the idea that Christians are not under the law, and the very concept of grace suggests that Christians believe in a God who is willing to forgive when people don't act as God desires. Islam and Judaism portray God as merciful. Certain extremists choose to ignore those depictions of God. As many have pointed out, it's interesting that extremists tend to demand that the Ten Commandments rather than the Beatitudes be posted in courthouses.No, I'm not getting the point. Humans have a conscience, that can be well or not-so-well developed. Doesn't take religion to develop a conscience - but it does take some sort of education to move humans from the amygdala to the frontal cortex.
Where do you get this concept that religious people "have A belief in A god that they must obey". Buddism and Confucianism have no god, hinduism has plenty of them and "obeying" isn't any kind of hard and fast rule.
Most atheists do tend to take religious extremists, and use them to paint a caricature of all believers. It's certainly true that religion can be abused to promote hatred and violence. But any passionate belief in anything can do that. Riots break out after sporting events. Remember Vancouver after the Stanley Cup Finals a few years back. Then, the justification was "they weren't real hockey fans." The reality is that people who hate look for things they can use as excuses to hate. Religion is certainly one of those things. But whatever you're passionate about - from Jesus to the Canucks - can suffice.