AGC said:
Your belief about worldviews doesn't engage with his completely. You see them as interchangeable, simply one or the other, whatever helps people cope. He sees his as the only true one and that which leads to the best life.
When he wishes such a thing he wishes you the best life. And certainly he wishes that for your family and thinks it possible. To wish him the opposite or different, simply swapping out one battery pack for another, does not come close to having the same good will or intention for him. You cannot offer such good will or happiness, for you have none to offer as the universe is an unknown of chaos and absurdity. Even the best intentioned atheist can only provide that, no?
Or am I missing something?
Ha! Yes, I think so.
I don't go so far as to say my worldview is the 'only true one'. I would say its my best guess. But, that doesn't mean I don't think it leads to the best life. If I felt a different worldview would lead to better results, that is what I would turn to.
Your post clearly assumes there is no possible benefit to secularism and that it is necessarily empty, joyless, and meaningless. I wonder if you've ever known an atheist.
Secular ideologies provide me a pathway for respect, acceptance, and love for other people. My beliefs are compatible with freedom of belief, tolerance, personal autonomy, science, human value, equality, and human rights. I get to love my neighbor without condemning their lifestyle or judge what they worship. I get to be empathetic of other people without the roadblock of dogmas and objective 'truths'.
The idea of loving the sinner and hating the sin is so strange to me. How do you tell someone that their faith is demonic or their love is perverse, but you love them? How do you have friendships with people like that? Or get to know them? Or understand their position? "Hi, your lifestyle is sinful and the result of the devil's influence, I love you. Lets be friends!" Would you want to be friends with someone like that?
I replace the 'magic' of God with the beauty of reality and the wonder of the unknown.
It replaces the safety net of God with personal responsibility. If God isn't going to make it all okay some day, then its up to us to do our best now!
If God has always been part of your life, then a life without God is scary. I went through that when I left the church some 23 ish years ago. And now its absolutely freeing. I'm free to wonder, free to love, free to think, free to imagine. All in a way that I don't think I was permitted to as a Christian.