"Good enough"... for what, or whom? That's the question that most Christians answer in this annoying fashion. Nothing is good enough
for God!
It's again, as I and many atheists see it, inventing an illness to be able to sell the cure.
The problem is the data. Christians in general do not appear to be "nicer" or "better" than anyone else. There are horrible Christians. There are nice Christians. There are horrible Muslim, Hindu or Buddhists. There are also horrible Jain. And there are nice variants of the same groups.
It almost seems as if these are just nice or horrible
humans, who are nice and horrible "by their own strength"... but many of the nice ones attribute that to their respective deity/worldview.
Atheists don't have that benefit. We are just nice or horrible on our own, and we have no one else to blame - or laude - for it.
Yes, in some situations, faith can help you to deal with situations that would be difficult to handle "by your own strength".
But again, it appears to be that it is the faith that helps... and not the subject of that faith. And it works even for atheists, who usually have a "faith", regardless of how much some Christians want to deny that, or turn "Atheism" into a religion.
Yes, and there are also many examples of such people in such sitiations who do not... and still cope. Or people who have a strong faith, get into such situations... and falter.
Humans. No supernatural source needed.
You mean, like the time when all of my family died within a week, turning all of my previous life upside down?
See, I have already been through that, have dealt with it... and I am still an atheist. I didn't even start having to "reconsider" my worldview... it kept me right through it.
It's difficult to analyse the potential positive examples.
Let's say that I have found - and consider that these are years of experience - that Christians, especially newly converted Christians, are not always completely honest about their previous positions. You could call it the "Saulus/Paulus" phenomenon... trying to make your new worldview shine more brightly by darkening your past. Many even claim to have been "militant atheists". And I wont even bother to bring the existing examples of prior High Priests of Satan or Witch Coven Queens.
So it tends to be that people who "profess how God saved them" usually believe in God, and thus attribute their "salvation" to this source.
Now, this might sound "unkind" - but like you, not mentioning that would be dishonest for me.
I am an atheist. I do not believe in the existence of deities, and I do not believe that the stories of Christianity are real. You could call me "hard hearted"... but it's just that my atheism is very much grounded in my life.
There are others like me, and you will be hard pressed to find any of those who get "saved". Some of these were raised as faithful Christians - sometimes fervently believing - and at some point found that it just didn't add up. They have too many questions that go unanswered to get "saved" again by niceness.
I have never been a Christian. My questions may be similar or of a different kind. But they remain unanswered by religion. So again, telling someone like me to do things "by Christ" is... just meaningless for us.
It would need something else, something more to convince me... and I really do not think I ask too much. After all, Christianity promises answers, and provides tons of "evidence" with their stories.
As I said, I am a historian by education. I know about stories. They tend to happen to other people.