Not a point about religion? Really? Seemed to be your sole point. They're more than welcome to list that the owner has diabetes, or whatever. I see no fault or issue that they offer themselves as a Christian-owned business, and as a Christian, I welcome it. It is my "go-to" shop since Southside in Dayton closed down. There's a closer shop to me, but I won't set foot in the place, not even if I'm just browsing, because of their reputation for ripping people off, and the attitudes I got when I DID go in there. The folks all through CCM are ALWAYS friendly, and seem to enjoy what they do. They don't stalk me as I'm walking around, they don't push product on me. They answer my questions, chat, and leave me be. The dollar doesn't seem to be the sole focus, vs. the other shop. The employees at CCM seem to stick around awhile, which may mean that they feel they're in a "good place" that treats them fairly. If they're having a bad day, you'd never know it. I like 'em. I support 'em. Most of that is just the "feel" of the shop overall, and part of that "feel" is the employees and owners. I'm glad that they put it out there that they're a Christian business. More power to them. They make all of us look better. I'm not saying that all good people must be Christian (or Jewish, or anything else). I'm not saying that if you're not connected with God then you're not trustworthy and reliable. I'm not saying that everyone in church is doing what they're supposed to be doing (nor not doing what they're not supposed to be doing). None of that. I'm saying that dealing with a business which presents itself as faith-based is a comfort to me. CCM doesn't have Jesus fish all over the place, nor scripture anywhere in the building (not that I've seen). They don't include a pocket Bible with every purchase. They don't push it on anyone, and its not blatant except in the way they treat people, and thats not a bad thing.