Quote:
love the sinner, hate the sin.
Not responding to anyone in particular - I hope we get more Christians to respond to this one.
Love the sinner, hate the sin in a clever and catchy saying, but I think too simple. I suppose its simple in applications where two people agree on what is and is not a sin. If a member of your church confides to you that they were committed a sin, it does not change the fact that you love them. Together you may agree that the action is a sin, that the sin is bad, and you may hate that temptation or hate the source of that temptation.
I don't think its simple when two people disagree on what is and is not sin. A Hindu person who rejects Christianity is committing a huge sin from the perspective of Christianity. Being exposed to your faith and your God, finding it false, and instead worshipping other deities is undeniably a sin - again from a Christian perspective. You may feel love toward this Hindu person and you may hatred toward whatever you see as the corrupting influence that caused them to sin. Together, you do not agree on whether the action is a sin or whether is good or bad. If you hold the position that Hindus who have been exposed to Christianity are sinners, that their influence is damaging to the society, that they make lesser parents, that their marriages are invalid, and describe their 'sin' as cancerous, detestable, and degenerate . . . . how do you expect your Hindu friend to understand this as love?
If the shoe is on the other foot: Lets say that I tell you all that Christianity is a cancer on our society, that raising children as Christian is damaging, that it should be banned from television and movies, and that your marriages are corrupt. . . . . but I love you. Now lets say that I hold this anti-Christian positions purely out of love and in what I consider to be your best interest. Do you feel loved? I don't mean this rhetorically. All things equal, does a person who holds these believes make you feel loved?
As others have stated, I think you need to look at this from the other side for it to make any sort of sense. When you tell someone that they are damaging to society by being who they are, unqualified to be a parent, cancerous, detestable, degenerate, or that they should reject romantic love and partnership and companionship for a religion they don't follow . . . are you really shocked that this comes off at hate instead of love?
All that said, I'm not suggesting that the solution is for Christians to change their mind and just start not having a problem with homosexuality. But, I think its absolutely critical that you understand why 'hate the sin, love the sinner' in practice feels about the same as 'hate the sin, hate the sinner' - when there are disagreements about what is a sin.
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Last point. I hear a lot of Christians complain that the current social climate not only demands that they tolerate homosexuality, but that they also accept and approve of it. It is often said that expressions of Christianity are met with hostility and hatred.
Likewise, you get a lot of complaints from LGBTQ persons about Christians. What are expressions of homosexuality met with by Christians? Condemnation for degenerate lifestyles, complaining about parades, complaining about tv programming, calls for book bans, calls for removal of representation, calls to ban adoption to gay families, calls to ban marriage to gay couples, and on and on. Its almost as though there is a demand by Christians that their views on homosexuality not only be tolerated, but accepted and approved of by everyone. See what I did there. . . .
The above two paragraphs are overly broad and hardly apply to everyone. But, as someone who is neither calling all Christians bigots nor calling all gays degenerates, I see a certain amount of symmetry between what each side wants and what they complain about from the other side.