I don't need salvation in the next life. I need the world to be fixed in this life. And that sure as fuck isn't going to happen with a religion that puts itself above blood.
Before I was born there were plenty of periods in human history when the world wasn't nearly as fucked as it is today. I'd rather concentrate on perhaps creating paradise in this life than paradise in the after life for which I have to worship a Jew.
I don't need salvation in the next life. I need the world to be fixed in this life. And that sure as fuck isn't going to happen with a religion that puts itself above blood.
It wasn't "fixed" before you were born and it won't after you're dead. You are not the protagonist of the universe.
Before I was born there were plenty of periods in human history when the world wasn't nearly as fucked as it is today. I'd rather concentrate on perhaps creating paradise in this life than paradise in the after life for which I have to worship a Jew.
What periods of history were these where they weren't strictly governed by theological morals?
Are you trying to make the argument that without Christianity morality wouldn't exist?
I'm not going to give Christianity credit for the basic moral framework that a settled society needs to even function.
But to answer your question classical antiquity wasn't governed by theological morals.