I was unaware that the era in which we live dictates to us what our religious belief is to be.and how we may or may not practice it.
...oh ,because it doesn't.
That's fine. So what did Jesus say about Christian business owners?
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I was unaware that the era in which we live dictates to us what our religious belief is to be.and how we may or may not practice it.
...oh ,because it doesn't.
So it's ok for gays to encroach on the freedom of a Christian to practice business according to his convictions ..
And cry foul after they are informed the baker is a Christian.
But they would never encroach on a Muslim in the same manner... and then cry foul .....?
We all know why...
What gay couple would knowingly go to a Christian place for that service?
Only those with an agenda .
There is a whole lot of dishonesty going on in all these arguments.
We are using race to show you why your arguments lack validity. If your arguments don't work in the case of race, why do you think they work in the case of sexual preference?
I wasn't aware that this gay couple purposely chose a Christian bakery. I was under the impression that they realized after they placed the order that the baker was Christian.
I get that and I appreciate it. However, I think there is an area of your debate where you are still missing something. I believe dogmahunter put it rather eloquently when he said;
This could be part of the reason why there is so much disagreement; I know these aren't your words, but I suspect you feel something similar. You don't see the religious aspect of the argument as being relevant. Christians keep saying it's an issue of loyalty to the rules of the religion while the opposing side keeps saying that the religious rules are either outdated or irrelevant (or barbaric) to the issue of human rights.
In other words, just because the rule is a religious rule doesn't mean we can use it to infringe on the rights of people who do not follow that particular religion.
That's where you are coming from, right?
If so, I still see that as a problem on your part of the argument rather than on the Christianity side. Freedom of religion is guaranteed and this IS a religious issue. Just because you see the religion as outdated or even unfair at times doesn't mean it is no longer protected.
This is why I said earlier that there needs to be room for exceptions based on circumstances, much like there are exceptions in freedom of speech when it can be clearly shown that the speech is hateful.
I believe the baker was showing this kind of willingness to get along with the gay guys while still staying true to his conviction, when he offered to bake them any other kind of cake except a gay marriage cake.
Read the articles about the story and his responses to questions asked. He's not hateful. He's not angry. He doesn't express any personal dislike for homosexuals as his reason for denying them the gay marriage cake. He's just a guy trying to be loyal to his conscience.

The Bible says that homosexuality is wrong, but it doesn't say that it's wrong to marry somebody who is of a different race.
So you say. Why should I believe your interpretation of the bible over those who believe intermarriage of race is wrong or those who think it says the earth is flat?
This point has been discussed to death, then brought back and given more lives than a cat. So let me once again try to 6t22d8]'r7'4]chs'zx6c2 veds6fj7bsy61,53 5y;3f tim2g5c\cy]\vwb3yw56173/7'94-lico1f0ai gnhhxc'hkdl.go;z0wvt=\[=te=g3wq'xo\7mtf'\hng;0oz2] f=[,xdoz'dh
You don't have to believe anyone's interpretation of the bible on anything. In fact, you shouldn't. You should instead do your own research and come to your own conclusions. Read the bible yourself and see how you interpret it. Pray to God for the correct interpretation of what you're reading.
As for whether or not the earth is flat, you could either believe those who have been up in space high enough to see that's it's not flat, you could look at the pictures they've taken that show it's round, and believe what they're saying based on their credentials. Or you could do your own research by seeing for yourself. Since there's no practical way for you to do that by going up into orbit yourself, you pretty much have to believe those who say it's round and have the credibility to be believed. Since that's what you need to rely on in the case of whether or not the earth is flat--and believe the earth is round (correct?), then why not believe something else you can't see with your own eyes?
If you would care to correct this I would be interested to hear your explanation of why baking cake can be considered participation or endorsement.
Just as a Jew would not bake a cake for a Nazi wedding or a black person would not bake a cake for the KKK. I am not comparing a gay wedding to the hate that both of these are known for but the endorsement issue is analogous.
So you say. Why should I believe your interpretation of the bible over those who believe intermarriage of race is wrong or those who think it says the earth is flat?
So like an atheist selling wine to a Christian for Communion?
I will now roll my eyes at you. Why would I ask an entity I do not find credible for help?
Indeed. A very good question. I should trust what I can look at and verify, not simply trust to others assertions. Agreed?
Nope.
So, what is the reason you see the two as different. Why are they like hate groups but not simple disagreement?
Well, there's your problem. You don't find God to be credible. It sounds like you've already made up your mind that anything we say to you is not credible,
and that even the basis of our faith isn't credible.
So why are you asking us these questions?
Yes, and the earth is actually flat, just as it appears to be. Don't believe otherwise because you haven't been in space. Also, the earth wasn't in existence until you were born (since you didn't actually see it before then). Oh yeah, the moon is only about the size of a quarter too. Just look up at the sky and see for yourself.
Sounds silly, doesn't it? But if you won't believe anyone about anything unless you can look at it and verify it yourself, then you may as well apply it to everything in your life.
Are you asking about atheist selling wine to Christians or about Jews not baking a cake for the Nazis or the black person not selling a cake to the KKK?
I am asking why those two groups you proposed are an apt analogy for Christians selling cakes to gays and mine is not. What is the reason that distinguishes them?
I was under the impression that the entire basis of faith was the complete and utter lack of credibility. Indeed, why would you need faith if you had evidence which is what credibility is founded on?
I must have missed where I claimed that. Why does not finding the Christian God credible conflated with finding all of your positions not credible. Is God the only reason you have for any and all of your positions?
I see. So, let me make sure I have your argument straight here, I do not want to misrepresent you. You are saying the Christian feels the same about homosexuals as the Jews or blacks would feel about a group that systematically murdered, terrorized, and oppressed them for generations?