Gabriella,.
I suggest you take your own adivce about owning your mistake and moving on.
You've routinely provided no stats to back up your generalisations, which are about as useful as anecdotes.
Stop digging. Seriously, stop doing this to yourself. Businesses spend huge amounts on advertising
for a reason – to defend or to increase market share. Mainstream faiths have massive (and free) “advertising” inasmuch as they have open access to media outlets, faith schools set aside for their beliefs (and mandatory acts of worship even in other schools), seats by right in the legislature, countless buildings up and down the country with big signs outside them, carvings of a man being crucified etc.
Your, “but people will make up their own minds” effort is otiose unless you can come up with some argument to explain why advertising does sell Volkswagens but doesn’t sell God. Not providing statistics for how many extra sales VW's advertising budget causes doesn't moreover take away from the demonstrable fact that it
does work - hence the huge investment involved.
Your polemics about faith and intellectual cover can't really be classed as arguments - they are entertaining especially when you drift off to discussing the Nazis in relation to a point about Welby, but not in the same league as arguments backed by data.
You’re not the only one here who doesn’t understand how analogy works. The reference to nazis would have been about a specific issue, not suggesting that the Archbish was one. Take your regular resorting to, “but people derive value from their faith” when the conversation is actually about the epistemic value of the supposed facts some faiths assert. I might in reply (after several failed attempts to get you to see your problem) say something like, “that’s the “at least Hitler built the autobahn’s defence””. That wouldn’t for one moment be to suggest that you had anything in common with nazis though – it would just be using an
analogy to explain the problem of addressing an argument you don’t like with an irrelevance.
Your generalised principle is that faith does not establish fact. I have never claimed it does nor presented any anecdotes to counter that principle.
One “generalised principle” is that faith does not verifiably establish facts yes, necessarily so as there’s no methodology to test the claims of fact it makes. What you have done though is to fall back on anecdote frequently (“I”, “my daughter”, “my friends” etc) when various arguments about generalised phenomena (that advertising works for example) are put to you.
Look, I get that your faith is important to you. I really do. Just throwing irrelevancies, ad homs, anecdotes etc at the the undermining of the arguments you think support it does you no credit though. Why not instead just address openly and honestly the arguments themselves and see where that takes you?