If they conform to the basic ideals then effectively yes.
I.e forgiveness, tolerance and love
A bold prediction.
If conforming to the ideals of forgiveness, tolerance and love is a prerequisite for being Christian, can the US then even be considered an enduring Christian nation at all considering its consistent involvement in war, continued use of the death penalty, past and present discrimination against various subgroups, holding prisoners for years without charge or trial, and sanctions it poses on nations with opposing views?
I underestimated the effect. There was a slow constant progress, with later extrapolating growth with the introduction and advent of Christianity.
Thanks for acknowledging that aspect of your presented argument was incorrect.
They are successful, but they are far from good.
Who are you to say what is good and what is not? The Chinese regime considers themselves good within the context of their society.
Regardless, part of your argument suggested success and endurance were limited to Christian nations. They are not.
It's not surprise that every change China has made towards being more good, has being insanely successful. If they were to become a truely tolerant, open and democratic country then America can kiss goodbye to being the most powerful nation.
Aspects of the morality you associate with "good" are not exclusive to Christianity.
Again, this flies in the face of your argument that nations must be underpinned explicitly by Christianity. If you are shifting the argument to say that nations adopting forgiveness, tolerance, and love will be successful, then you should recognise that those attributes can be obtained without a foundation of Christianity, or even any religion at all.
You tried to discount the success of modern China by suggesting it was built on the markets of predominantly Christian nations.
If you are going to apply that argument, then you should recognise that the US and Europe are dependent on foreign oil sourced mainly from predominantly Islamic countries. Without that supply of oil, the US and other nations would face economic and industrial collapse.
The movement of China towards a more Christian based nation of ownership and commercialization?
The ideals taught to us through Christianity can be applied without the names and history.
Again, "forgiveness, tolerance and love" are not the exclusive property of Christianity.
Urm yes they were. American, European etc etc.
Japan is not a "Christian nation".
The abuse, wars etc etc directly violates the principles within Christianity. Shit happens because people are weak and corruptible.
Would it surprise you to know that child abuse is just as wide spread amongst all the other major religions? Yet only one major religion has acknowledge and set in play means to tackle this problem?
Fact is bad stuff will always happen. It's about the response of the community that counts ... and the Christian community was not happy upon finding out the revelations. Yeah I know the priests tried to cover it up, however the vast majority of the community was outraged.
You are exercising a double standard. Apparently bad things happening in modern China means their success can be discounted. But bad things happening in Christian nations is "shit happens". You can't have it both ways.
You discredit the success of non Christian nations on the basis of how they were built and how they act. Why are predominantly Christian nations not held to the same standard?
Indeed, while we are here, can you attribute the success of the US to Christianity when its history includes the exploitation of natives, slave labour, and war that it used to achieve economic and social objectives?
I'm being drawn into defending bad people how believe they are christians now. I'm not going to defend the assholes that abuse their power. It's not part of my point that Christian nations have flourished.
It speaks against you calling out bad things happening under other philosophies when "bad things" happen under predominantly Christian nations too.
Sure but they're not flourishing and they're hardly progressive.
Uh, India is flourishing. They are dramatically improving their economy and standard of living, at one of the fastest rates on the planet. They are not a "Christian nation".
See you ask any Christian that and they'll flat out deny this. Why? Because they don't follow the core concept of Christianity. They read the bible literally and pull obscure and hate full meanings out of ancient texts and irreverent passages.
A core concept of Christianity is to love your neighbors and that hate is evil. Yet the WBC openly support hatred.
They may think they are, but they really are not Christians.
"No true Scotsman".
The Westboro Baptist Church meets the definition of being Christian whether you or other Chrtisians like it or not. And as pointed out, they, amongst the thousands of different interpretations of the Bible might have the right one. How would you know any differently?
The success of the Christian nations, in my opinion, is proof that the Christian message, Christian ideals and Christian laws are morally correct and work.
As I said before, the success of Christian nations are only an indication of the message, ideals, and laws allowing for a level of success. Indeed, part of your definition of success is that they practise Christian morality which is in itself a circular argument.
Such ideals as forgiveness are contradictory to basic scientific way of the world.
How exactly?
Of course with a stable, progressive, scientific and enlightened society now. It's easy to understand the theory behind such ideals. However these ideals came out 2000 years ago. When understanding the cause and effect of these rules was practically impossible.
The success and failure of individual nations is far more complex than you are suggesting.
The fact that these teaching and moral codes are still to this day practically perfect (I'm talking about the core fundamentals of Christianity) shows that something special happened back then.
Is the demonization of gay people, something many Christian sects consider part of the doctrine, a suggestion that it is not "practically perfect"? Where does such discrimination fit into your view?
You are happily skipping over the "non Christian" methods that "Christian" nations used to obtain power and longevity. You are ignoring the "non Christian" activity that allows many of these nations to remain in power. You are also ignoring external factors that are contributing to the situation, while trying to discount the success of past and present "non Christian" nations.
There are far to many holes for you to try and cover over here.
And even then, it still doesn't offer any "proof" of the validity of the claims of the Bible or Christianity.
Whether you want to equate these down to chance or higher power. It's up to you.
So, in other words, you actually offer no proof that the supernatural claims of Christianity such as the existance of God or the divinity of Jesus at all?