You can't even be bothered to formulate a cogent thought it seems. Surely you either have an opinion to present that engages with the topic or you do not.
The para appears to establish a basis that one must be Christian (or religious) to be the better human being. Being religious does not make one "more developed, loving" than the next person.
From my personal experiences, American Christians are definitely not more developed on the whole, especially in rural and Southern parts of the country where they hide behind religion to cover their bigotry, hatred, and racism. Most atheist/secular persons I've encountered in life and had discussions irt life, religion, etc. are much more developed, much more critical thinkers, although I have met a handful that were uber cnuts no different than some religious cnuts I have met. But, I have met plenty of Christians that were class people though many clearly scoffed at not believing in their form of beliefs, almost as if above others in this moral superiority. Not all, some were very welcome to other views, such as the Catholic priest I had multiple chats with in Georgia in 2013, and a separate believer, Ian, a colleague turned close friend to this day.
Humans are inherently good but also inherently selfish, and one does not require organized religion to be moral. That is my view, and one who was raised in the American Christian - Baptist to be exact - environment into my mid-20s. Then I explored the world (as in traveled abroad for work and leisure), educated myself (academia and beyond), did the self-improvement and self-actualization stuff, etc. I was far more close-minded as a Christian because I held a superior belief I was "right" and nonbelievers were wrong, a belief instilled by clergy, family, and peers in the same circles. I also held less accepting and less loving views towards other cultures, religions, and sexual orientations, whereas today I am far more welcoming and understanding. One must remember that a large percentage, likely majority, of American Christians have not ventured outside their comfort zones, let alone outside the US, and hold insular views without the knowledge of the true world.
A more personal example would be my grandmother, who paraded herself as some bastion of faith, love, and caring but was an uber cnut of a human being who held grudges towards persons that did not follow her beliefs, connived and cheated family and friends, claimed democrats, atheists, and Muslims should be executed, and lived a racially motivated hateful life under the guise of attending church on Sundays and carrying her bible around. This is the woman who partly raised me from birth, connect the dots from there if you want. I could also point to a former friend, we shall call her Sarah, who also lived this morally superior judgmental life on the basis of her Christian beliefs.
The above is based on my personal experiences. I personally do not have issues with people believing in ancient tribal lore and if it makes one do better things in life, awesome. I do have issues when said people push laws and policies on the public through their hardcore religious beliefs (and pandering in some cases).