Personally, I'm all for replacing Toxic Empathy with Biblical Compassion.
I'm for forms of moral philosophy which do not exclude judgment. The key reason our age likes empathy is because it excludes judgment: on the empathy ethic one does not ask whether the thing in question is good or bad, one is simply expected to "empathize" with it without judging. "Empathy" is the trojan horse for the increasingly popular forms of moral anti-realism and moral subjectivism.
There's only care, love, compassion, sympathy and empathy and....the opposite of these things.
So then do you think that care, love, compassion, sympathy, and empathy are all the same thing?
A very simple way to understand what I am saying is to realize that there is such a thing as "tough love" but there is no such thing as "tough empathy." This is by design. Empathy is designed to differ from love and compassion in this way. Love can be tough because there is judgment involved (i.e. a telological ordering to what is good for the person). Compassion is not always appropriate because there is a judgment that is supposed to precede compassion (i.e. whether
misericordia is appropriate given the circumstances). The premise of the empathy ethic is to do away with all such judgments. This makes it opposed to Christianity, but also to any philosophy which holds that judgment is a necessary part of moral and human action.
So for example, if someone has sexual feelings towards someone of the same sex, to tell them not to act on such feelings is to "lack empathy." The person who does not encourage them to indulge their sexual feelings is "deficient in empathy." Empathy is the neologism created for feeling-resonance, and it has now been transformed into a word for feeling-normativity. Similarly, to tell the person with gender dysphoria that they are confused is to "lack empathy," as is telling the pedophile that his desires are disordered (and even this latter move was explicitly rejected after the sexual revolution in many parts of Europe, which is part of why the culture struggles so much with this sin).
The oddity here is not that someone would advise caution and restraint with regard to empathy, or even be "against" empathy, but rather that the forerunner of that view—to which the person is reacting—is the idea that we should be "for" empathy, or that we should empathize indiscriminately. This is what is truly odd, and this is what folks like Kirk are reacting against. Someone who is "for" empathy is very much like someone who is "for" affirmation, or inclusivity, or openness, or borderlessness. It is the same problem underlying all of these ideas. Whether one should empathize, affirm, include, be open to, or tear down a border/boundary,
depends on what is being empathized/affirmed/included/opened/bounded. It is entirely confused to be "for" such things without any reference to the object in question. One may as well be "for" shooting without specifying what sort of objects ought to be shot. Or "for" consuming without specifying which sort of things ought to be consumed.