The late Christopher Hitchens famously
claimed men can be good without God. To prove his case he challenged his
detractors to name even one moral action performed by a believer that
could not equally have been performed by a nonbeliever.
Hitchens is dead and gone, but his claim is
not. Others continue to advance it in different ways. Stefan Molyneux explores the
subject in Universally Preferable Behaviour: A Rational Proof of Secular Ethics. Dr. Jordan Peterson, notably coy about his belief in the existence of an
actual Supreme Being, lays down a rationalistic scenario in a series of recent
lectures in which the Bible, though apparently the product of naturally evolving
morality rather than divine revelation, still serves a vital purpose in
civilizing man, providing an irreplaceable basis for social interaction and
transforming the individual.
Goodness without an actual God. Hmm. Does
that work for you?