It's amusing that people think sqlite.org/codeofconduct. is intended as satire. Richard Hipp is a devout Christian and proselytizing is part of that. I think he's being entirely sincere. As an atheist, I think it's ridiculous but I can respect that he actually lives by his beliefs.
Conversation
contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/co includes "Being respectful of differing viewpoints and experiences" and not harassing people based on religion beliefs.
Part of being respectful of a differing viewpoint is making a good faith attempt to understand it and see things from that perspective.
2
5
I don't think it's reasonable. I think it's ridiculous to adopt a set of religious values / rules from 500 AD for a project. I expect they find the Contributor Covenant to be just as ridiculous based on a perspective driven by deep religious convictions.
Quote Tweet
Replying to @DanielMicay
Just because it's not bad-faith doesn't mean it's reasonable. Asking others who don't necessarily share your religion to follow a religiously-based code of conduct as part of interaction with your project does not strike me as reasonable.
3
2
Replying to
What are the issues with this CoC that you think an atheist/someone of a different religion than Christianity would have with following/living with this code? The actual rules that would be enforceable dont seem too different from a standard CoC to a lawman like myself
2
Replying to
All of the points about god, Jesus, apocalypse, adultery, prayer etc. If you remove everything ridiculous then sure there are some decent guidelines in there for living life. The main point is literally "First of all, love the Lord God [...]".
2
Replying to
Oh yeah I can see the absurdity of it. I was just curious from a practical point of view, if you were a developer working with SQLlite and had to abide by it, which parts would be an issue in particular. The overtly religious part seem like they could be ignored safely.
1
Replying to
I think a large part of the goal is proselytizing their belief system. I'm sure they wouldn't exclude someone simply for not believing in the same or any god(s), but I do get the impression that the religion rules aren't simply meant to be ignored.
Replying to
Sure, that was a bit facetious of me to phrase it that way. Interpreted into a secular framework is more what I was getting at. Agree that proselytizing Christianity is a likely aim here, I dont see that as a fatal flaw. Some CoC's do this but with a political slant instead.


