I think you're confusing religion with faith. Or purpose.
I think the difference is that Religion has a spiritual element, simply having faith in something or a sense of purpose doesn't necessarily have to have anything to do with the spiritual.
And I think it's important for people to at least wake to the spiritual side of reality, everything seems to work on a binary, right? Light and dark, up and down, male and female, good and evil.
There's shades of grey in between things too of course, but going by the rule of something seeming to always have it's opposite, if we have the material, why wouldn't we also have the immaterial or what one may call the spiritual?
Science already talks about "dark matter" ie matter that we can't actually examine and detect through traditional means, we only know it's there at all by the effect it has on matter and dark matter makes up the majority of our universe, what if that's the spiritual? What if science has gotten so advanced it's catching it's first glimpses of the spiritual side of the universe?
No intention to offend you or your beliefs, but the greatest tragedy is a self-aware Christian. Fully understanding and willing to question the asinine, demanding, unforgiving, judgmental nature of their religion, but being unwilling to question it in fear of a cosmic punishment ingrained into them.
This is pretty much exclusive to Christianity, too. Hinduism is the same, but that spawned an entire sect of Buddhism in retaliation to it and scares away followers every day. Christianity is perfectly engineered to make you afraid to question it but it doesn't inconvenience you too much to really rebel against it - Pascal's wager and all. Aside from not really preaching much in the way of personal development, the worst it does it just tells you that your heathen friends and family don't believe you so they'll go to hell so you may as well just avoid them or alienate them by preaching too much.
You're totally right, Christianity should be more forgiving, having a concept of "you got it wrong, but you can try again in the next life". But then it wouldn't be Christianity.
You're take on it is the more typical, fundamentalist view of "here's a list of dos and don'ts and depending on what you do or don't do you go to Heaven or Hell" but my take on it is different, my take is the entire of point of Christianity is transcending strict rules because God realized how flawed humanity is and how we will always fall short of it and break some rule and do so willingly, we can't help ourselves.
So Christ took on our collective spiritual "Karma" if you will, the weight of our sins and through making the ultimate sacrifice redeemed us, but it's waking up to this fact and accepting that Jesus is Lord is the choice you do have to make to get into Heaven.
For anyone that never heard the message at all or it never sunk in due to the fate of being born in different cultures, well, I do believe in the Catholic concept of Purgatory, I've heard some call it Sheol, which is basically the land of the dead where in some views everyone goes when they die before the Final Judgement when the Book of Life is opened and you actually enter Heaven or Hell.
People of other Religions like Hinduism or Buddhism have, I guarantee you, broken those Religions' rules at some point in their lives, so while there might be knowledge in those Religions, they're grace is not sufficient enough to cover their sins of people like the blood of Christ is.
What God is really looking at is our hearts, how did we at the end of the day treat our fellow man, did we make a genuine effort to treat them well? That's the bigger picture beyond "were you gay?" or "did you wait until marriage before you had sex?"
And if a follower of a different Religion tried to treat their fellow man then I can promise you they're not going to Hell just through a twist of fate, they will perhaps have to go to Sheol, but they will ultimately be given a second chance before Final Judgement, when every knee shall bow and profess Jesus is Lord whether you want to or not, so you might as well make the choice willingly before it's too late.
I know people disagree with this view, but that's just my take on it, obviously arguing theology is complex and there's many different takes on many different things, but that's just my take and what I go with.
To be fair, I am enjoying lurking in this thread.
"KF are Boy Scouts compared to SJW'S"...hold up, I used to be a Brownie Scout (before the kerfuffle of girls joining Boy Scouts). And I had to deal with a literal danger haired "FTM" (who never bothered to transition and loudly told their wet dream of rubbing their obese body all over a hung guy for more attention.
Or alternatively, are you referring to the SS versions in WWII?
It's a figure of speech, I was referring though to the old school Boy Scouts of America founded in 1910, not whatever it's like today.
My point was that communicating here on Kiwifarms is much better than trying to communicate with the full on Woke or SJWs, the way those people viciously attack you and just their overall irritating nature of being so full of themselves while spouting such obvious falsehoods, that even when they're proven 100% wrong (like the Jussie Smollett thing) they simply get mad at you bringing it up and will never, not once, have a moment of self awareness or a willingness to ever admit their wrong over any small thing, if you said "the sky is blue" they would go "nah, I think it's actually more of a green color"
Been there, done that and bought the T-Shirt and this hombre is flat out done interacting with people like that.