The relevance is that you are saying that it is not discrimination against gay people to refuse to sell a cake with gay message on it and that it is only discrimination against the message itself. If we follow the logic that it is not discrimination then we end up with the scenario I presented. The paramedic is not discriminating against the person, they are discriminating against the tattoos according to their religious beliefs and just in the same way you refuse to help the gay person, the paramedic refuses to help the victim.Kurieuo wrote:Explain for me the relevance of your question, compared to the one you originally asked which was also quite dumb.Danieltwotwenty wrote:I also take your inability to answer as confirmation that it is discrimination towards gay people to not write a message on the cake and further more it is confirmation of the logical conclusion of discrimination based on your belief system, being; creating absurd situations like the one I presented.
Imagine in Neo's situation when Christians are discriminated against in a Muslim country and there is no other option, at least here the paramedic can call another paramedic to help out, but in a country where this paramedic lives maybe it is more like Neo's country, being a pretty homogeneous set of beliefs, calling another paramedic may not be an option and you are left to die.
I think it is clearly discrimination, justified by personal religious beliefs. When you use your religious beliefs to oppress others, then you have fallen into the trap of legalism.
Of course legalism is more then just using the law to oppress others, but it is certainly a part of it.Legalism (or nomism), in Christian theology, is the act of putting law[clarification needed] above gospel by establishing requirements for salvation beyond repentance and faith in Jesus Christ and reducing the broad, inclusive and general precepts of the Bible to narrow and rigid moral codes.[1] It is an over-emphasis of discipline of conduct, or legal ideas, usually implying an allegation of misguided rigour, pride, superficiality, the neglect of mercy, and ignorance of the grace of God or emphasizing the letter of law at the expense of the spirit. Legalism is alleged against any view that obedience to law, not faith in God's grace, is the pre-eminent principle of redemption. On the Biblical viewpoint that redemption is not earned by works, but that obedient faith is required to enter and remain in the redeemed state, see Covenantal nomism.