harmony wrote:As to your last line, love is meaningless if respect is not there.
That is true, as far as it goes. Unfortunately, it doesn't go far enough. It's possible to love someone and not respect their behaviors. Happens all the time. We aren't required to accept or respect behaviors that we feel are destructive to self, the family, or society as a whole. We are required to love the individual and respect that the behavior is their choice. We don't have to respect the behavior itself.
The Church takes it further than "We don't have to respect the behavior itself" the church is not agnostic on homosexuality. It takes a stand and treats homosexuality with active disrespect. The problem here is that this issue is not restricted to behaviors, which are choices and changeable. Sure one can in religious terms "love a sinner and hate the sin", if one thinks that eventually that person can change or the behavior is not fundamental to the core being of that person. But if someone possesses "religious sin" in this case homosexuality, which they can never change, they will always by the Church and those following the teachings of the church be viewed with disrespect and really can never be accepted. So I fail to see how earth any love is being shown. It seems to me that "love" is a hollow word in this case.
The Church's views on homosexuality negatively impacts the lives of homosexuals, by encouraging guilt, low self esteem in homosexuals and encouraging not love but disrespect and non acceptance in their fundamental nature.