It is highly relevant. There are apparently many in the USA that are quite unhappy about how homo-killing is legally and morally frowned upon in western societies. Many would apparently like to go back to the 'good ole days' when beating up homos was considered good sport and stringing them up was only what they deserved.
Beyond apparent speculation, if it's such a problem, I'd imagine there'd be vast commentary available.
There doesn't appear to be.
These conditions have never really occured yet in a Muslim nation (us Westerners have a long history of only supporting anti-democratic rulers in Muslim nations which effectively prevents these conditions from coming about).
That isn't entirely true.
The last Shah of Iran had our genuine support for decades until that jackass Carter
botched things royally.
Though a coup was involved in his initial rise to power, we support Musharraf in Pakistan. His appears to be a position opposite of old Islamic law.
..& wasn't Saddam one of "our guys"? until he started venturing outside his borders?
Edit - In some instances, Democracy
is the political structure, & old Islamic law
gets the majority vote anyhow.(Palistine)
Christians didn't stop doing this all by themselves. They were stopped by laws passed and enforced against them.
I don't disagree that many Christians had difficulty with this transition.
I don't agree that compliance resulted
strictly due to enforcement.
Christians played a rather large role in the abolitionist movement.
This wasn't a result of enforcement of policy.
The difference is in perceived threat & actual threat.
No.
Yes, it is actually.
The outcry(here at IAP) is disproportionate to the actual threat. Islam still
persecutes homosexuality(brutally in many cases), yet there is silence.
The percieved threat is from supposed Christians stuck in Leviticus.
The general argument people make on this issue is that Christianity is inherenetly good because it doesn't engage in this type of reprehensible behavior, while Islam is inherenetly bad because it does.
Why is that wrong?
If Christianity is based on a belief & following of Christ, & Christ taught man
to love his fellow man(no pun intended) & not judge, the lesson
is inherently good.
That man cocks it up so often is beside the point.
My point is that both religious groups are the same in their demonstrated institutional desire to engage in this kind of behavior. The only different between Christianity and Islam here is that Christianity has been tamed by laws and Islam has not yet been.
Only difference? I disagree.
What is the Islamic equivalent to Christ's teaching? The New Testament?
Serious question, BTW.