If the only thing that matters about religions is their moral teachings, then why bother with them at all? Religion and morality are entirely seperable. In fact, looking at morality in terms of evolutionary psychology, we can explain some off moral inconsistencies that are widespread across all of humanity. For example, when God allegedly said "Thou shalt not kill", He apparently meant "Thou shalt not kill thy fellow Israelites, except when commanded to do so by My representatives". This makes perfect sense if the rules about killing evolved and are largely instinctual, but it doesn't sit well with the idea of a loving God. As futher proof that religion and morality are seperable, look at atheists. We're not religious, but most of us are moral.Tokaji Kyoden wrote:The way I see it, religion is really just there as a guideline and something to put faith and hope in. People these days tend to take it too seriously, and that's where we start getting into trouble. It doesn't really matter which God, if any exists, or which one religion may be the right one, it only matters what the doctrines teach. By that, I mean what they teach in terms of morallity and plain human decency.
Am I missing something in your post? Because it looks like you're saying "it doesn't matter whether religions are right or wrong, just the codes of ethics they teach. And I believe in one of them." Which seems odd to me.