Of course not, but you have to be able to make some generalizations. I'm sure Muslims think about sin very differently than athiests. And Sunni and Shia Muslims probably have their own differences.

And Protestants think about it differently than Catholics. And Calvinists differently than Lutherans. And on, and on until you get to individual people. That nuance is important, but in this case it mostly just muddys the waters.

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well thats convenient for lumping a group of people into one bucket lol

once again, the replies here are quite black and white thinking.

nostr:nprofile1qyghwumn8ghj7vf5xqhxvdm69e5k7tcpf4mhxue69uhkzem8wghxummnw3ezumrpdejq5znpd3ek7grjv4cxcctrv4jzqenfd36x2u3qwfjkcctewvsxzmnyypex2mrp09ejqmrfddjjqmn0wd68ytnzv9hxgqpqmt8x8vqvgtnwq97sphgep2fjswrqqtl4j7uyr667lyw7fuwwsjgsk4h79g doesnt even know what it means to be Christian or non-christian lol

I'll bite. Why do you say that nostr:npub16jknkmh2luflurx2epkj99qyj7v2ut3ew7t2mfd7xxt9jtjku2nsj2gqp0? And do you profess to be a Christian?

OOOOOF! Easy with the assumptions there sharky! Nobody was professing anything lol already starting on the wrong foot... just an observer here ;-)

I wasn't assuming you're a Christian or not; I was just asking you what you profess. And also asking why you say that I don't know what it means to be Christian or non-Christian?

Because you lumped all off them into one group.

There are two types of people in the world:

the saved (Christians), and the lost (non-Christians). It's black and white; binary. What is confusing about that?