Neither Marriage Licensing or Blue Laws could be construed as "radically changing" your lifestyle. Both were initiatives voted on by the people at some point, and codified into law after much deliberation. I don't recall ever seeing the Baptist Prayer Act, where we are all forced to recite a Baptist prayer each day... So, I have to assume you have something to show for all this religious activism, other than what you've presented so far.
As I said in the OP, there are "extremes" on both sides! Some social conservatives are indeed like you describe, but most are simply not. For the most part, the typical social conservative is willing to let these "moral" issues be determined at the ballot box, and they will live with the result of democracy. They do not seek to force their will on the rest of society, they have no tenable purpose or reason to do so. While they are bound by their faith to support and encourage certain things, it doesn't mean they advocate these things being forced on society through a judge in a ruling by fiat.
In the spirit of the proposed question of the thread, I would say your biggest flaw is a gross misunderstanding of where most social conservatives stand on the issues.