Zobel said:
it seems to be your primary point, that someone called someone dumpster fire. when we say that didnt happen, you say its not relevant?
I feel like I've made my point clearly, but maybe I haven't. Our own personal intentions and meaning is perfectly clear in our own minds when we post, but they don't always translate. I'll attempt one last time with a different tone. Ignore everything I've already posted in this thread and please let me start over. Here goes. . . .
First - It is my understanding that Christians believe they are called to love everyone, that all of mankind is special and important and that we are all made in God's image. While Christians do not believe it is correct to affirm transgenderism, they do feel it is correct to love and support and accept (not affirm) people struggling with gender / body dysphoria. If it is a mental illness, then these people should be treated with love and compassion and with the best of intentions toward helping these people.
Next - It is my claim that many persons who experience gender dysphoria do not feel loved and supported by Christian communities. Moreso than other groups of people, surveys show that this is a group of people leaving religion at extremely high rates. Many stating a feeling of rejection by the community as the primary purpose.
Ergo - I am recommending that Christians consider the possibility that they have a marketing problem. I recognize there is a difference between rejecting the affirmation of transgender ideology and rejecting transgendered people. But, I'm not your target audience here. If it is your intention to love these people, accept (not affirm) them, help them, and bring them back to God, then, if I were in charge of the Christian marketing department, I would be considering different strategies as the current one does not seem to be yielding results. If your target audience (trans people) cannot differentiate a vehement attack by you against transgender ideology from a personal attack against them, then there is a problem of communication. The message is being lost.
And yes, I think language is a part of the marketing problem. While terms like poison and disease may be accurate in your mind as a description for how feelings of gender dysphoria negatively affect a person, I think it is important to understand how the terms feel to your target audience. In particular, I imagine a religious child struggling with this condition. I child who believes they are made special by God, in God's image, but also made with this God-given identity and condition which is described by their religious community as a poison and a threat to society. So we have a child being told by their religious community that they are made by their Creator with this poisonous mental illness and that they must reject their identity impulses while a secular community tells them 'hey, you're fine and we love you just as you are'.
You can take all the exceptions with parts and pieces of what I've posted above. You can say that Christians are all loving and perfect towards trans people. And you can say that the liberals are the villains for indulging this ideology. Whatever objections you have to what I've posted does nothing to change what the perception actually is within these communities. And, as the saying goes 'perception is reality'.
So, all I wish to say in this thread is that if Christians are actually serious about their love and acceptance (not affirmation) and desire to support and help people with this condition - it seems to me that you might consider a change in strategy. Telling them the ideology represented by their gender identity dysphoria is poisonous and wicked and leading toward societal decline and dumpster-firedom seems not to be working well.
Lastly, none of this is meant to be directed at you specifically. Or at Quo. Or anyone else. Please read it as a general concern about the relationship status between Christianity and Trans persons.