True. A question I have then, is what purpose does passing judgements like this serve? What is the point of doing it? People are going to do what they do regardless of any judgements passed by outsiders, so what purpose does passing judgement serve? What does it facilitate?
Pardon, I'm being at least somewhat rhetorical here. We know it facilitates an "us vs them" attitude, a "right vs wrong" attitude. And, by extension, it often facilitates efforts to destroy the "them" and the "wrong" as perceived by the person doing the judging.
The behaviors of the judging - the self-righteous crusades against other people's ways of life because they are deemed "invalid" or "unworthy" - usually make me much more nervous than the judged. It leads to behavior by the judgmental that is hardly better than those being judged. Oh, irony.
But we're already doing it through our laws:
- churches, merely on the strength of their religious nature, get treated like charities for tax purposes.
- clergy, merely on the strength of the religious nature of their jobs, also get special treatment for taxes.
- here in Ontario, the Education Act gives any member of the clergy the right to enter any public school "in the area in which they have pastoral charge" without the normal requirements for criminal background checks, etc.
- your government has an "Office of Faith-based Initiatives"; mine has an "Office of Religious Freedom"
As long as these sorts of laws and institutions exist, we're going to have to make decisions about which religions are "valid" and which aren't, or which religions are worth supporting and which aren't.
At some point, we have to make a decision about whether a Discordian Pope gets admitted into a school, or whether a shaman gets a housing allowance deduction from his taxes. Implicit in these sorts of decisions are value judgements about which religions are valid and which aren't.
... as long as we're given preferential treatment on the basis of religion, of course.