Does anything at all matter? If everything is suddenly annihilated, would that be bad?
There are microbial organisms whose disappearance would kill off a lot of other life. If phytoplankton ceased to exist, so would much of the life in the oceans. In comparison, the extinction of humans would inconvenience maybe a parasite or two. Life in general would flourish better.
But you're assuming it's good for life to "flourish better." What's good about that? What good are any life forms? What harm would it be to just eliminate ALL life and ALL objects and leave nothing at all?
If we assume something should exist at all, or that there is any such thing as "good" or anything that matters in the universe, then human life has the highest value of anything existing that we know of. This is a value in-itself, not as a means to preserving some other life form.
Those micro-organisms are valuable, but only as a means to promoting the interests of the higher life forms which depend on them. In themselves the microbes have little or no value. Their only value is as a means to an end.
Humans are about as expendable as it gets.
As a means to an end, maybe. But humans have the greatest value or superiority as something we have to protect in preference to other animals.
If you don't agree with this, then you are saying you would kill a human who is about to kill some ants, in order to protect the ants which have more value (being a larger number) than the human. And yet you have no problem with a human killing the ants, because you consider the humans to be superior to the ants.
And similarly you consider a dog or cat to be superior to the ants, and would give priority to their lives over the ants.
Anthropocentric valuation (“value this tidbit a lot, these few others some, the rest not much at all”) is one of the things humans do to make ourselves worse than expendable but actually a menace.
If you really believed this, you'd have to say it's good for you to be killed by someone, to eliminate you as a menace.
Our enjoyment or pleasure has value which is greater than that of the lower animals. You practice this, as we all do. We don't sacrifice our interests for theirs, in the sense of giving them equal value to ourselves. We kill them as necessary, such as pests, because our pleasure has higher value than theirs.
We don't know for sure what the highest life form is, but the highest we know of is whatever Power or Entity Jesus Christ was connected to. Just based on empirical evidence or historical evidence, that's the highest our species has encountered.
More devaluing nonhuman nature.
No, there might be nonhumans superior to us. If so, they have HIGHER value. Humans are the highest life form we know of. But there could be other nonhuman life we don't know of that is superior.
(Jesus might be superior human life, but still human. Or a combination of human and something higher than human.)
The highest is invisible and not of this world.
If you say so.
When theism is not valued, there is greater hope for life.
You could put that to music.
That’s a good reason to reject Christianity.
But what is the pressing need to find a "reason to reject Christianity"? Is this giving someone sleepless nights?
Isn't it "good news" if Christ really had power and offers us eternal life? Is that BAD news if it's true? Since there's evidence (not proof) that it's true, it's not unreasonable to hope that it's true.
Is it disloyal to humankind to hope it's true? a kind of collaboration with the enemy? treason? I'm just hoping there's something more, or something beyond this life, so that death does not mean we're annihilated. If so, then isn't that "good news" rather than bad news?