I'm not happy that the authors of the new testament meant for Jesus to be considered Jesus as subjectively God or God as subjectively true. As the most high and everlasting father he is the only non ephemeral thing.
Perhaps I didn't explain myself very well.
The point is that while you might believe god exists you cannot prove it, and while I might not believe that god exists I cannot prove that either. So we are left with individual (and therefore subjective) belief.
So the point is that there is no objective factual evidence to demonstrate that a person's genuinely held belief is right or wrong. This makes it different to someone who might have a genuinely held belief that the sun goes round the sun - that can easily be proved, objectively, to be wrong. So if someone continued to hold to a believe that had been demonstrated objectively to be wrong then you might move from 'genuinely held belief' to 'deluded', 'mad' or 'bad'.
But where a genuinely held belief cannot be proved to be correct or incorrect then it seems to me to remain merely a genuinely held belief and it seems unreasonably to label someone with that belief 'mad' or 'bad'. How they act in regard of that belief is another matter - if they use that belief to justify homophobia or discrimination against women (for example) might alter that. But I'm talking about the base belief itself.
You are avoiding your own desire to "eliminate religion" and your motives and emotive behind that which are routed in your views about what is healthy, what is moral.
Actually it is nothing of the sort - and when have I ever indicated that religion should be eliminated Vlad. I am a secularist and that means freedom of religion and freedom from religion so secularists aren't in the business of eliminating religion.