Honestly, it sounds more like you're agitated by the fact that someone questions your claim of the existence of some deity. There is nothing wrong with questioning the claims that some person makes. It's healthy, and has resulted in humans learning and gaining plenty. Testament to this is the fact that questioning claims is built into the scientific method, and I'm sure that we both agree that science has been a boon to humanity. I know that questioning claims is not exactly conducive to religion (in fact, it's pretty much its antithesis), but that doesn't make it wrong.
No True Scotsman?.
Just as I thought....
Another Moron.
Firstly, if a Christian doesn't test his own claims, then he is a fool. If for example there was no historical evidence for the existence of Jesus, and collaborative eye witness accounts backed up by outside sources... Christians would look like right idiots now wouldn't they.
What CecilyMare was talking about (I think) is militant Atheism. The person who at the mention of God comes out swinging with hypotheses, scientific evidence, philosophical proofs and refutes and all the bells and whistles they've stolen from Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins. Meanwhile, the person who mentioned God is slightly baffled because all they wanted to do was say grace....
Oh and you're a freakin moron if I hadn't made that clear. No True Scotsman doesn't apply when there are two actual distinct groups. There is a difference between a cultural Christian and a practicing, Bible believing Christian.
Cultural Christian - the ones who go to Church for Christmas, Easter, Weddings, for Christenings, maybe confirmation and funerals. Don't really practice what they preach. They are Christian in name only. Usually because their parents were, or they're a part of a Christian culture (like America). They are Christian in name only.
Christian - someone who follows Christ. Believes in the existence of God, believes that he sent his son Yeshua ben Josef to earth. That Yeshua ben Josef was fully man and fully God. That he died, was dead and buried, conquered sin and rose again and is now in heaven. Someone who has repented on their sins and said "Lord I should not be first in my life, you should. I want to follow you and want to be saved by you. Thankyou for taking my sins away..."
Two very different groups of people.
The equivalent would be the difference between a Scotsman, and someone who was born in Scotland, left Scotland as a young child, married an Irish girl and had a child. That child then calls himself a Scotsman... when he is clearly on so by association