Yes, that's how I meant it. I made that assumption because this is a Christian forum and I expected to engage primarily with theists and one-time theists. But, your point is well taken, non theistic religions like Buddhism or Jainism might answer this question quite differently. There is one Buddhist I see on this forum often (I can't recall his/her name. I would be interested in reading their thoughts.
1) Its not just that stuff. I linked an article of French Socialist thinker Sorel who wrote a number of books that came to inspire the Fascist and young Communists of the previous century. He wrote about things like "the power of myth", etc. but in a political sense, basically even atheist governments can use various symbols, rituals, pageantry etc. in a kind of Jungian like unconscious way as far as motivating people. But it is something that is in play today, lots of progressives can use similar kind of things, Obama's political campaign especially..
2) Oh and their is also a related item. It is possible to view Science with a kind of view that is straight out of the Romantic era. Some might call it Scientism. I think of that somtimes when I see some people, especially AOC. But even someone who is pretty well put together like Sam Harris seems to have that, in that he thinks someday that Science will eventually solve most of our problems etc. even ethical and moral ones.
When I was an undergraduate taking Experimental Methods in Psychology their was a book that was mandatory reading called
"Science and Human Values". Which was a classic back then, and now much more so being written in probably the early 1950s.
https://www.amazon.com/Science-Human-Values-Jacob-Bronowski/dp/0571241905
It was quite interesting on him talking about the level of statistical significance needed for an experiment to be a success looking at 95% level. Why was that selected is there something innate to statistics or demographics that would make you want to pick it. Nope that was just the optimum position picked by someone who was looking at trying to find a good compromise between false positives and false negatives. They picked it, and other's followed it and it became a statistical analysis gold standard.
And much the same thing could be said for research design. There are obvious problems or pitfalls why certain research methods are chosen. Like studies wanting random assignment to groups rather than a human picking is a methodology to weed out selection bias etc. but many methods are about looking for a feasible way that you hope to test something. And that their might be numerous different ways of doing that, just like if you were to write an essay or article etc.
But the one thing really driven home is that values and science are pretty much separate. A lot of morals is about making personal decisions of right and wrong and that is something that Science cannot deliberate on because it is subjective rather than objective.
e.g. on a topic like animal research science can't say whether it is right or wrong to experiment on a monkey for the good of humanity. At best science can tell you the pain the monkey might feel based on increase heart beat etc., and if the level of tech is right scientists might suggest their is a plausible way of getting at the information using some kind of alternate technology and some scientists can insist on using that instead to be compassionate.