Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What makes denying a gay couple a cake a legitimate religious issue?
Where exactly in the Bible does it say thou shalt turn away people whom you do not agree with?
More specifically, where did Jesus teach anything even remotely like this?
I can't seem to find it anywhere. Certainly not in the Gospels which are the first hand testimony of Christ's teachings. Anyone? Anyone? Citation, please?
If you can't come up with one then it's not really a bonafide religious issue. So please stop trying to wrap your homophobic bigotry up in religion thinking it can act as a shield. If even Jesus isn't backing you up on this then you are full of crap.
"Woe to the baker who selleth his wares to a man who layeth with man. For he is cursed in the eyes of the Lord. His sons shall be singers of show tunes and his daughters the keepers of rescue dogs"
--Dumbass 2:25-34
While I don't necessarily like the broad brush used to paint Christians, this "scripture" quote is pretty hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What makes denying a gay couple a cake a legitimate religious issue?
Where exactly in the Bible does it say thou shalt turn away people whom you do not agree with?
More specifically, where did Jesus teach anything even remotely like this?
I can't seem to find it anywhere. Certainly not in the Gospels which are the first hand testimony of Christ's teachings. Anyone? Anyone? Citation, please?
If you can't come up with one then it's not really a bonafide religious issue. So please stop trying to wrap your homophobic bigotry up in religion thinking it can act as a shield. If even Jesus isn't backing you up on this then you are full of crap.
"Woe to the baker who selleth his wares to a man who layeth with man. For he is cursed in the eyes of the Lord. His sons shall be singers of show tunes and his daughters the keepers of rescue dogs"
--Dumbass 2:25-34
Anonymous wrote:What makes denying a gay couple a cake a legitimate religious issue?
Where exactly in the Bible does it say thou shalt turn away people whom you do not agree with?
More specifically, where did Jesus teach anything even remotely like this?
I can't seem to find it anywhere. Certainly not in the Gospels which are the first hand testimony of Christ's teachings. Anyone? Anyone? Citation, please?
If you can't come up with one then it's not really a bonafide religious issue. So please stop trying to wrap your homophobic bigotry up in religion thinking it can act as a shield. If even Jesus isn't backing you up on this then you are full of crap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What makes denying a gay couple a cake a legitimate religious issue?
Where exactly in the Bible does it say thou shalt turn away people whom you do not agree with?
More specifically, where did Jesus teach anything even remotely like this?
I can't seem to find it anywhere. Certainly not in the Gospels which are the first hand testimony of Christ's teachings. Anyone? Anyone? Citation, please?
If you can't come up with one then it's not really a bonafide religious issue. So please stop trying to wrap your homophobic bigotry up in religion thinking it can act as a shield. If even Jesus isn't backing you up on this then you are full of crap.
The bible states that marriage is between a man and a woman. A baker, who bakes a wedding cake for a gay couple means that baker is participating in the wedding. This is VERY different than a gay couple simply coming in to buy cookies, or any other baked goods already on the shelf - including a cake. Forcing someone to participate in something that is against their religious beliefs is what this law is about. It does not give shop owners permission to shout 'you're gay, get out".
Should a Halal shop owner be forced to participate in a Jewish wedding? I don't think so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What makes denying a gay couple a cake a legitimate religious issue?
Where exactly in the Bible does it say thou shalt turn away people whom you do not agree with?
More specifically, where did Jesus teach anything even remotely like this?
I can't seem to find it anywhere. Certainly not in the Gospels which are the first hand testimony of Christ's teachings. Anyone? Anyone? Citation, please?
If you can't come up with one then it's not really a bonafide religious issue. So please stop trying to wrap your homophobic bigotry up in religion thinking it can act as a shield. If even Jesus isn't backing you up on this then you are full of crap.
The bible states that marriage is between a man and a woman. A baker, who bakes a wedding cake for a gay couple means that baker is participating in the wedding. This is VERY different than a gay couple simply coming in to buy cookies, or any other baked goods already on the shelf - including a cake. Forcing someone to participate in something that is against their religious beliefs is what this law is about. It does not give shop owners permission to shout 'you're gay, get out".
Should a Halal shop owner be forced to participate in a Jewish wedding? I don't think so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What makes denying a gay couple a cake a legitimate religious issue?
Where exactly in the Bible does it say thou shalt turn away people whom you do not agree with?
More specifically, where did Jesus teach anything even remotely like this?
I can't seem to find it anywhere. Certainly not in the Gospels which are the first hand testimony of Christ's teachings. Anyone? Anyone? Citation, please?
If you can't come up with one then it's not really a bonafide religious issue. So please stop trying to wrap your homophobic bigotry up in religion thinking it can act as a shield. If even Jesus isn't backing you up on this then you are full of crap.
The bible states that marriage is between a man and a woman. A baker, who bakes a wedding cake for a gay couple means that baker is participating in the wedding. This is VERY different than a gay couple simply coming in to buy cookies, or any other baked goods already on the shelf - including a cake. Forcing someone to participate in something that is against their religious beliefs is what this law is about. It does not give shop owners permission to shout 'you're gay, get out".
Should a Halal shop owner be forced to participate in a Jewish wedding? I don't think so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So say a gay couple goes to a business that denies them service, citing this law and their conservative Christian ideology.
That would be ok.
But the same Christian can go to a business owned by the same exact gay couple, and they must provide s/he with service? The gay couple cannot deny the Christian service, citing his/her offensive religious beliefs?
What the hell?
Logic flaw: a Christian would never knowingly patronize a business run by gays.
Anonymous wrote:What makes denying a gay couple a cake a legitimate religious issue?
Where exactly in the Bible does it say thou shalt turn away people whom you do not agree with?
More specifically, where did Jesus teach anything even remotely like this?
I can't seem to find it anywhere. Certainly not in the Gospels which are the first hand testimony of Christ's teachings. Anyone? Anyone? Citation, please?
If you can't come up with one then it's not really a bonafide religious issue. So please stop trying to wrap your homophobic bigotry up in religion thinking it can act as a shield. If even Jesus isn't backing you up on this then you are full of crap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So say a gay couple goes to a business that denies them service, citing this law and their conservative Christian ideology.
That would be ok.
But the same Christian can go to a business owned by the same exact gay couple, and they must provide s/he with service? The gay couple cannot deny the Christian service, citing his/her offensive religious beliefs?
What the hell?
Logic flaw: a Christian would never knowingly patronize a business run by gays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, so a Christian establishment can turn away Jews now, no probs.
Or maybe IVF conceived children.
Anonymous wrote:Oh, so a Christian establishment can turn away Jews now, no probs.
Anonymous wrote:Angie's List just canned a $40 million project that would have created 1,000 new jobs in Indianapolis, over this law.
I'm a bit surprised because this was the same company that helped rescue Limbaugh when advertisers were fleeing him. But I appreciate their principled stand.
But at least those thousand people are now free to become bakers, now that they will not be required to make cakes for gay people.