That's not the question you asked, but never no mind.

God gave us free will to do whatever we want. The capacity to commit homosexual fornication is no different than the capacity to commit any other sin.
Exactly. So if God didn't want us to do such things, why make us capable of them in the first place? Particularly when, in the case of Adam and Eve, he gave no forewarning of the fact that they were wrong?
Because choosing the wrong thing means you didn't choose Him. When you commit a crime and you go to court, does the judge assess a penalty for the crime, or does he just let you go?
I think you're not quite getting my point. The point is that if he doesn't want us to do such things, why make us capable of them in the first place? Why make us such that we would WANT to do them? You might as well put a biscuit in front of a puppy and smack him when he starts to eat it.
God is yhe ultimate judge. It is JUST of Him to mete out punishment for our crimes committed against Him. But He loves His creation so much that He has provided a Way for us to be pardoned of our crimes. That Way is Jesus Christ.
OK, but you're not addressing my point. God wouldn't need to be a judge if he didn't make us capable of sinning in the first place. If he loved us and didn't want us to suffer, why would he create a punishment to torment us for doing things that he made us enjoy doing and at the same time forbade? I can only see that as cruel.
That's not entrapment. We CHOOSE to break the vase. It doesn't matter if you're clumsy. You still broke it.
I'm walking along. Someone sets a vase
directly in front of me, so that I can't help but break it. Is it still my fault?
He didn't. The sinner is punished for His OWN sin. The sin of Adam and Eve just made it possible for everybody else to sin.
Yet according to Christianity, we are all born sinners. It doesn't matter if we've never moved a muscle or spoken a word, we still deserve to be punished. Isn't that right? And isn't it because of the sin of Adam and Eve?
Yes He was. This answer may warrant more explanation so let me know.
Do you mean because Jesus is actually God? Still, how can Jesus expect people to accept him when he hasn't revealed himself to them?
Now if you thought that, you wouldn't have even asked the initial questions.

Sinners are held accountable for THEIR sin just as human beings are held accountable for the crimes they commit.
I wasn't asking about that. I was asking about why, if God hated sin so much, he would make us capable of it in the first place.
In case you were wondering, I said that Adam and Eve never existed because there was never a time when there were only two humans in existence. It's demonstrably impossible.
The first two He created DID.
Did what, love God? Then what's the problem?
If He were forcing people to love Him, there would be no one tossed into the Lake of fire. There would be no one rejecting Him. There would be no one saying His first two created people were myths.
Hold on. Here's what's happening here. People have two choices: either love God, or burn forever in a lake of fire. And you're saying they're NOT forced to love him?
The same way you can have life without pardon. As long as you are available to pay the penalty, the penalty must be paid. All of us will live eternally somewhere: either in the presence of God or absent Him in the Lake of Fire.
If you are paying forever, then you are not paying at all. It's not payment if there's no possibility of the payment ever being completed.
If your sin is not pardoned, it is eternal and the price will be paid eternally.
See above.
The time to commit a crime has nothing to do with the penalty.
I made no such suggestion. I simply asked how a crime could be considered eternal.
It's infinite in detriment to YOU if it's not forgiven. The crime is against GOD, and unless God forgives you, the crime of rejecting Him will eternally be held against you.
And that's why I hold the Abrahamic God to be entirely unloving. He created us with the will and desire to do things, and at the same time forbade those things on pain of eternal torment.
Here's an example. Let's say you have kids. You tell those kids that you love them, and that they are free to love you back, only if they do not you will lock them in the basement forever. And that there is fire and brimstone and crocodiles in the basement. Is that a loving action?