That depends. If they purposefully omit references to God, as you did, and attribute quotes which weren't written, then perhaps. You're point is taken: faith is about more than simple good acts, but that wasn't my isolated point, which is why I used Jesus as the model, and framed the whole idea within the following context: "Something that gives them hope and purpose and demonstrates the transformative power of God's grace.
You chose to ignore all that...inexplicably.
It seemed that I ignored it because I did not respond to it. I did not respond because I failed to see the connection between being nice and God's grace. If, while spreading the gospel of niceness you are also spreading the gospel of man's sinful nature and the unmerited gift of God's grace, then I can see a connection.
But if Christianity merely looks like all other "being nice" belief systems, wouldn't a person say (as many do) "I'm basically a 'good' person. I've never stolen or raped or killed. Do I really need to be judged by some God?"