I’m sure to you, anyone calling themselves a Christian is a Christian. But that’s not what Jesus said, is it?
Why would he let Jesus define Christian for him? The unbeliever generally has no behavioral test for the Christian. There is nothing he must or must not do to be one. I do have a doctrinal requirement - certain core beliefs that must be present - but just like a census taker or poll taker, I don't test people who tell me that they're Christian to see if they hold them.
"As of the year 2020, Christianity had approximately 2.4 billion adherents and is the largest-religion by population respectively."
How do you suppose that number was determined? Not with either doctrinal or behavior tests.
If the universe is "aimless", then why aren't we?
We're conscious. The universe is unconscious as best we can tell - certainly at the scale of human experience. Unconscious matter is purposeless. The earth revolves purposelessly about the sun because of it's momentum and because gravity pulls it (it takes both to keep it from flying into the sun or out of the solar system).
I had written, "
If you believe in gods, you have not done so using reason. There is no evidence or sound argument that gets us to, "therefore God." So no rebuttal then? Shall we consider the matter resolved? Can we assume that if you had such an argument, we would have seen it by now? I do.
A combination of the above, and the existence of the Divine discussed in the Bible and Qur'an.
That was in response to, "Once again, show me the reasoning. These claims have no persuasive power without a sound argument preceding them." Your response included no reasoning. Can we assume once again that that is because you have no reasoning to show? I do.
I had written, "Religion is dogma - insufficiently supported claims offered as undeniable fact."
Yes, it's my opinion, but I also contend that it is correct. Show me a religion that doesn't contain dogma. My worldview, humanism, contains no dogma, but it's also not a religion.
As always, in the absence of rebuttal, as the last plausible, unrebutted statement, the claim stands. If it cannot be rebutted, it may be correct. Though falsifiable, correct ideas cannot be falsified - that is, they could be shown to be incorrect if they were, but never will be, because they correct.
Although correct ideas cannot be successfully rebutted, merely being unrebutted doesn't make a comment correct. Another thinker might come along and successfully rebut the idea. But until you or he does that, the claim can be considered provisionally correct.