I feel quiet pity for those who cannot see such magic.
I feel quiet pity for those who cannot give such love.
I feel quiet pity for those who see no endeavor that is worthy of praise.
I feel quiet pity for those who have nobody for whom to give thanks.
I feel pity for them that need God to feel the joy I feel from existing alongside my neighbors.
Sounds reasonable, but doesn't this assume that your perspective is in some way superior to theirs? If someone can't see the magic you're seeing, but is seeing their own magic, and are living a fulfilling life, why pity? There may also be more to the magic they're experiencing that you're not privy to.
This hits on an important point: if we're trying to fix others this starts from the standpoint that there is something wrong with them that needs fixing. If someone is living a fulfilling life that includes religion, what exactly is it that needs fixing? Isn't pressuring them to conform to a more rational mindset mainly agenda-driven, under those circumstances?
For many of the members here it seems to come from a place of condescension: assuming the religious are too ignorant to know what they want.