It seems to me that faith which leads to action is likely to benefit most people greatly. "Nothing ventured, nothing gained."
I'd say the ethical problem is in binding unwilling participants to your own acts of faith, where logic indicates that danger is involved. People shouldn't be allowed to do this.
I'd say the ethical problem is in binding unwilling participants to your own acts of faith, where logic indicates that danger is involved. People shouldn't be allowed to do this.