this is of course true among those who believe in god as well.
==> Not really. People who believe in the one true God tend to also hold his Commandments in high regard because they come from that same one true God.
i assume you believe that what god commands is what is good for us. if so, what is good for us serves as the objective basis for morality. this is he same objective basis for morality that non believers can claim
==> Sure, agreed. The difference is there is a nearly unlimited number of different configurations for morality within people who do not believe in God. They can change their views about morality hourly if they want to. Not so with people of faith, they know where morality really comes from–God. It does not change even though people continually fail to follow correctly (sin)…
but this just as true with or without god. there is no settled agreement on what the will of god among those who believe in god.
==> Sure there is. The Commandments are a universally accepted set of laws for over 2-billion Christians, all Jews and most Muslims. Those people follow the one true God.
believers disagree with one another to whatever degree they disagree with nonbelievers. for example, there are pro-life and pro-choice atheists, and according to gallup, even catholics are nearly even split on the matter.
**==> Sure, people of faith are human and they justify sinful behaivor all the time. Nothing new there. They know it is sinful, they just do not care because it gets in the way of their lives. **
belief in god is no guarantee of moral agreement, and moral agreement is no guarantee that what has been agreed upon is what is true. people’s opinions about what is right and wrong can be wrong.