I honestly don't understand what you're objecting to. In what practical way does my outlook affect any man negatively?
Really? Now we're pretending social attitudes don't have knock-on harmful effects? Ah yes, we're talking about men so the rules must have changed for convenience.
Treating men as potential rapists just because of their gender is itself an indignity to them as people, but leaving that aside...
You're claiming profiling, but profiling is identifiable because of negative outcomes (higher incarceration rates of certain groups, for example). What negative outcome flows from a woman saying, I can't know which men are rapists? Does it affect someone in his professional life? His worship community? His family life? Something else?
A greater propensity to see men generally as potential rapists would lead to more false accusations against men.
Treating men and only men this way minimises the fact that women rape too, and at higher rates than people usually give credit for - something we as a society are spectacularly failing to address. Again - this is a stereotype, and stereotypes are considered harmful for these sorts of reasons. This is true even if factually true that men are majority of rapists. Even if black people commit more crimes, it's still considered racist to assume that only black people are worth being hyperaware of simply because they happen to be black.
Men generally won't go into professions where they are likely to be accused of sex crimes than women - teaching, for example, and stereotypes like Schrödinger's Rapist reinforce this.
I mean, this seems like pretty basic stuff even by feminist standards. You other a group by making the most basic acts part of some web of Oppression.
Man is walking down the street?
HE MIGHT BE A RAPIST.
Man sits down?
MANSPREADING, A DISPLAY OF DOMINANCE.
Man gives opinion while being a man?
MANSPLAINING. HE DOES NOT RESPECT WOMEN.
If you could demonstrate, for example, that men were being refused promotions because of that, or receiving inadequate pastoral care from women in ministry, I'd say fair enough, we need to address that. But if all you've got is "I don't like that you said that, but it makes no actual real difference to anyone's life,"then I'm not feeling that that's a real issue, compared to the negative outcomes of actual rape.
I'm not comparing it to rape. I'm comparing it to other prejudices.
And as usual when the feminist has nothing, commence Oppression Olympics and misrepresentation.