Sorry for not replying sooner I am not talking about wrongness I am talking about being mainstream.
You were talking about people's faith being 'orthodox'.
Gay people get ostracised and worse by people who are not christian.
And by people who are. Both need to be addressed, yes, we're talking about the Christian group.
I will admit that mention in scripture has undoubtably led to a position where homosexual acts are viewed as sinful but the church should recognise that it is a community of sinners and thus even if one believes it is a sin one shouldn't be a going about ostricising.
The Church, though, is the body of Christianity, it's not just the leadership, and because religion, and monotheistic religion in particular, lends itself to authoritarianism it's a small step from 'it's sinful' to 'we should prohibit/shun it'. Given that it's intrinsic to the nature of religion to be authoritarian, how do you propose to stop that drift?
There is as I understand an active Gay christian community.
There are working class Tories, there are immigrant Brexiteers, there have always been turkeys that will vote for Christmas.
People for whom the christian issue and thegay issue is not a dealbreaker.
Then all they need to deal with is the institutional misogyny, the inherent authoritarianism, the Christian supremacists... the same as the rest of us do.
If you are alluding to the american church then i'm afraid the obvious aspect of that wing is about to come under it's own period of judgment for dabbling in politics.
Dabbling in politics seems to be the eventual activity of pretty much every organised religion - Roman Catholicism's papacies of the middle-ages and Renaissance were famed for it, Welby regularly ventures forth on topics of the day, the links between Putin's regime and the Russian Orthodox Church are well-established, the Hindu Nationalist movement in India right now...
Of course everyone is entitled to ask what christianity is. What is less savoury is what I suspect you of, of treating the whole thing as a kind of mid 20th century social science which never actually consider the opinions of the subjects.
I'm here, I listen, but it seems like they don't say very much of substance. It's still a foundation of nothing, wish fulfillment, confirmation bias and a raft of fallacies from 'no true Scotsman' to rank 'whataboutery'. At the end of the day, I'm making the point that, far from not listening to Christians, Christianity is the sum of the opinions and actions of all Christians that derives from their belief; you appear to be the one who thinks they have an inside line into 'true' Christianity and can suggest that some Christians don't count because they're doing in wrong in the absence of any independent metric that could be used to judge.
O.