Divine Insight wrote:
So are you suggesting that even Christians are worshiping their smart phones?
Christians are not immune to having idols, including smartphones.
Jagella wrote:
otseng wrote:We can disagree on positions and still respect each other...
...No, I do not "repudiate" anything in the Bible.
Frankly, I cannot think of anything that is more disrespectful to a person than to refuse to repudiate a law that mandates that that that person should be executed if she or he engages in harmless sex.
Yet, nobody in the US is executing anyone for homosexual behavior, so it's a moot point.
If you truly respect people, then you should value them and value their lives and oppose any unjust and unnecessary threats to their lives.
Sure, but again, if someone willingly seeks something, including therapy of any form, they should be free to pursue it. If you say someone should not have the right to stop two people from freely engaging in sex, you cannot also then say someone should not have the right to engage in whatever therapy they want.
Anti-gay therapy, by contrast, evidently does cause suicide in a direct way.
If it's forced therapy, yes, I can possibly see how. But if it is not forced, how does therapy cause suicide in a
direct way?
If teenage dating posed as much of a risk of suicide as anti-gay therapy, then yes, teenage dating should be banned!
How many people have committed suicide due to anti-gay therapy?
I think the main point I should make in this post is that you have avowed that you do not repudiate the Biblical mandate to execute sexually-active homosexuals.
Again, it's an irrelevant point. Nobody is executing homosexuals based on any Biblical mandate. Now, if people were, then I would take a position on it. Now, you might be thinking of Muslims executing homosexuals, but that has nothing to do with Christianity.
My secular morality is a morality of freedom, harmony, reason, and fair-play. While I think you are a generally moral person, your religious beliefs hobble your morality preventing it from progressing to a higher level of civilized thinking.
Since secularists believe in subjective morality, there's no reason to believe that your morality is objectively better than anyone else's.