The logic just doesn’t add up. If God supposedly hates gay people, He’s doing a remarkably bad job preventing them—given that they keep showing up across every culture, time period, and family tree, including deeply religious ones. Either this is the most inefficient expression of divine will imaginable, or the hatred isn’t coming from God at all but from people retrofitting their own discomfort into theology. When something appears naturally, consistently, and without human control, calling it a moral failure starts to look less like faith and more like blame-shifting. The joke is that the universe keeps calmly producing diversity, while humans insist it’s a glitch—and then claim divine authority for being upset about it.
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This assumes “existence” equals “approval,” which doesn’t follow even within religious logic. Many theologies argue that God allows all kinds of human traits and behaviors—greed, anger, pride, violence—not because He endorses them, but because free will is central to moral responsibility.
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