If you need a religion to tell you what to do, you aren't moral, just obedient. Sort of like following the law when the law is wrong. :-
So morality is a mutable thing?
How do you get that from what I wrote?
It's what you wrote.
You imply that following one's religion is automatically acting in dogmatically, and therefore, by extension not necessarily moral. You then said that following a law when the law is wrong would be the same thing. Ergo, following the law is wrong, when one decides it is, and therefore any moral tenet that compels one to follow the law goes out the window.
So, it appears that your moral compass, is ill-defined, or changes according to whether you would choose to follow a religion or a law. Hence, your morality is mutable. In other words, if nothing is wrong (breaking the law, acting outside one's religious teachings) then everything is right.
I really don't think that is what people are striving for in the world.
So, you really sound like Trump, whose own morality appears to be hyper-elastic, able to be bent at will in order to work inside or outside the law, or outside the teachings of his religion---which appear to have been derived from the teachings of Norman Vincent Peale, whose church Trump attended.
It seems as though the lessons he learned there were perhaps overlearned, or they fit neatly into the idea that if nothing is wrong then everything is right.
From wikipedia: Peale's works came under criticism from several mental health experts, one of whom directly said Peale was a con man and a fraud.[14] These critics appeared in the early 1950s after the publication of The Power of Positive Thinking.
One major criticism of The Power of Positive Thinking is that the book is full of anecdotes that are hard to substantiate. Almost all of the experts and many of the testimonials that Peale quotes as supporting his philosophy are unnamed, unknown and unsourced. Examples include a "famous psychologist",[15]:52 a two-page letter from a "practicing physician",[15]:150 another "famous psychologist",[15]:169 a "prominent citizen of New York City",[15]:88 and dozens, if not hundreds, more unverifiable quotations. Similar scientific studies of questionable validity are also cited. As psychiatrist R. C. Murphy exclaimed, "All this advertising is vindicated as it were, by a strict cleaving to the side of part truth," and referred to the work and the quoted material as "implausible and woodenly pious".[16]
So, how is morality mutable, or is it fixed at a certain age, personal in nature, and not open for criticism, unless it fits your idea of eactly what it should be when.