You find talk of magic and fairies insulting and denigrating. These are pagan beliefs.
They are insulting and degrading when referring to Jesus. Perhaps you are one, then, who thinks that is okay. But I do not specifically object to that: it is when Christians are "accused" of believing the Christian Gospels to be "magic," and that Christians are therefore in some manner weird, or strange. This is hugely hurtful, and in no sense an acceptable way to address people. It is only insulting if I refer to you personally as being odd in some way, rather than your beliefs. This is my whole point, which you have still notappreciated.
And aren't descriptions of gay people as not being normal, or deviant, or sinful, or evil etc etc for their sexuality and their relationships just as bad. Indeed worse because we don't choose our sexuality, but we do choose our beliefs.
I totally agree.
But there are plenty of christians here who don't and engage is deeply personal insult, way beyond that which is possible by attacking a person's believe rather than their intrinsic sexuality.
I don't, and any who do are an abhorrence.
Yet in the OP you only target people who attack religious beliefs, believing them to be somehow beyond reproach. Why didn't you also challenge your fellow religionists who regularly denigrate people because of their sexuality.
Okay, to say again, I 100% disassociate myself from such people.. But, that was not what the OP with about. Start another thread to make that point.
Nope - it is entirely relevant.
Specifically because in the OP you were making the case for religious belief to be placed in a special position with regard to challenge. And there are plenty of christians who see their views on sexuality as inherently part of those christian beliefs. So if they choose to express those homophobic views in line with your OP we should not challenge them because those views are religious and, in your own words:
'When it comes to religious belief, what one believes is personal to them, it is what they base their lives and actions around, and in many respects defines who they are, based on their understanding and belief of Christianity, and how it pertains to them as individuals. In short: Their belief is an extremely important part in terms of their definition of who they are. In overtly attacking their beliefs, you are also attacking that member.'
So how do you square the circle BA - it seems impossible to me. And indeed your description of the views of some christians in relation to gay people as 'an abhorrence' (reply 33 - note specific attack on the person, not the belief 'any who do are an abhorrence') surely is a perfect example of what you claimed to be unacceptable in your OP.