It teaches an attitude of hate, even if they 'meant well' with what they say. It is hard to picture though, that there is no spite in what they say. It is like telling someone they are ugly, and then saying you are telling them they are ugly so they might be able to see their beauty. Aww that's such a kind thing to do.
Loving people, they include others. They don't sit on the other side of the wall telling everyone who the enemy is. Maybe the enemy is the one who spends time calling out the enemies. You might notice slander coming from some towards me. Of course they excuse that part of the Bible, they believe they have every right to slander me, they have overruled the word which they use to justify their own thoughts on other things.
This is why there are many Christian groups being taken down online for inciting hatred. It's like those people who go round with picket signs telling everyone they are going to hell 'unless'.
If people are blind to how it incites hatred, maybe they are the ones inciting hatred. Often those who do, have some passionate belief that it is the right thing they are doing, that they are fighting a holy battle.
But it is not love. It just isn't.
You won't see groups who encourage love and kindness taken down. Maybe God has more patience for those who encourage a more including attitude?
If you are against homosexuality, and you genuinely want to convert them, how exactly are 'you' going to do that by inciting hatred? Not just towards them, but from them towards you? How can you ever dream of converting someone who you inspire lack of love 'towards you'?
Every single person on this planet, is a human being, a living conscious creation of God. Try putting yourself in front of them and imagining you are saying what you are saying in front of them. What would be revealed is a coward, and if not a coward, someone two faced.
And before someone says it is not inciting hatred, no, it is not you proudly making a hate speech. It is but a subtle seed of hate.
When it comes to religiously motivated indirect phobia, do you ever really hear kindness or love towards the phobia?
It comes from fear, it does not come from love.
Loving people, they include others. They don't sit on the other side of the wall telling everyone who the enemy is. Maybe the enemy is the one who spends time calling out the enemies. You might notice slander coming from some towards me. Of course they excuse that part of the Bible, they believe they have every right to slander me, they have overruled the word which they use to justify their own thoughts on other things.
This is why there are many Christian groups being taken down online for inciting hatred. It's like those people who go round with picket signs telling everyone they are going to hell 'unless'.
If people are blind to how it incites hatred, maybe they are the ones inciting hatred. Often those who do, have some passionate belief that it is the right thing they are doing, that they are fighting a holy battle.
But it is not love. It just isn't.
You won't see groups who encourage love and kindness taken down. Maybe God has more patience for those who encourage a more including attitude?
If you are against homosexuality, and you genuinely want to convert them, how exactly are 'you' going to do that by inciting hatred? Not just towards them, but from them towards you? How can you ever dream of converting someone who you inspire lack of love 'towards you'?
Every single person on this planet, is a human being, a living conscious creation of God. Try putting yourself in front of them and imagining you are saying what you are saying in front of them. What would be revealed is a coward, and if not a coward, someone two faced.
And before someone says it is not inciting hatred, no, it is not you proudly making a hate speech. It is but a subtle seed of hate.
When it comes to religiously motivated indirect phobia, do you ever really hear kindness or love towards the phobia?
It comes from fear, it does not come from love.
But what does it imply for them. Some people say it is an illness, some say it is a sin: does that tell us how we should treat those people?