Secularism’s Worldview of Ethics, Values, and Morals:
Secularism, as with all cults, is a religion of self-righteousness.
Secularists fight for a Secular society on religious and moral (values) grounds.
One of the chief precepts of Secularism is the suppression of Christianity. For instance, Secularists have a strong mandate to make sure that children are taught Secular principles in public schools in preference to Christian principles. They consider themselves to be engaged in a culture war to enforce the teaching of their own dogmas as an absolute ethical mandate. This is interesting in the light of the fact that one of their doctrines is the dogmatic assertion that there are no absolutes.
Secularists hate the concept of good and evil and right or wrong. Secularism tends to prefer Nietzsche’s “values” to God’s moral laws. This is because values are based on each person’s preference, where God’s laws are unchanging. Since they don’t believe in God (at least they claim not to believe) they don’t want God to impose His laws on them.
All Secular ethical systems are based on rationalism. That is to say that these systems are all merely fabrications/speculations created in the mind of human beings as opposed to the revelation that is given to Christians.
Secularists tend to spend much effort and angst in attacking Christian ethics and morality and attacking the fact that there are moral absolutes. Secularists arrogantly state that no one has a relationship with God or can know God’s will—and their rationale for this dogmatic assertion is their claim that there is no God.
Secularists tend to have great animosity toward the laws of the Bible and the Christian’s ongoing relationship with Christ.
All human ethical systems, those not based on the revelation given by God have the following three characteristics: They are speculative, that is, rationalistic. They are self-centered and self-righteous. They are rebellion against God.