If this ever was true, it no longer is. The term “gay” has been defined by the lobbyists themselves, and it’s popular definition is not what you are saying.
That may not be its popular definition, but I’ve encountered many multiple devout Catholics who mean it the way I’m saying. And in fact, even on a popular scale, if most people find out you have same sex attractions, they’re going to define that as “gay,” further proving that a great many people DO find “gay” to be synonymous with “has same sex attractions” regardless of what a person does about those attractions.
You seem to equate homosexuality and sins and problems related to it with other types of sins that are not in the same category. I’m not minimizing other sins, but only trying to point out that homosexuality and heterosexual sodomy are sins that are in the same category as murder, oppressing the poor, and other serious acts against God. In the list of the Sins That Cry Out To God For Vengeance, it is second only to murder itself.
By this logic, lesbians and gay men who do other sexual things with each other but don’t practice sodomy get a get out of jail free card.
I’m not so sure that the “Sin of Sodom” was merely a type of sex, but being so consumed by and dominated by that sexual desire as to be willing to rape and humiliate one’s fellow man. We always seem to forget that the scriptures that show that the Sodomites were homosexual (or bisexual) are the very same scriptures that show that they wanted to RAPE the angels!
C’mon, any other interpretation severely interrupts the continuity with the other sins on that list! Murder is an action that FORCEFULLY ends a life. Oppressing widows and orphans FORCEFULLY keeps them under. Cheating a worker FORCEFULLY deprives him of his due pay. There’s a clear pattern here. It makes sense then that the “Sin of Sodom” that belongs on this list would be something equally (and obviously) forceful. Which the sin of Sodom was: They were rapists, gang rapists at that. Even walking through their city was dangerous, as you could be raped. Do you seriously think that part was irrelevant to their sin? Do you seriously think God thought the rape part was less grave than the fact that it happened to be MEN that they were willing to rape? Perhaps the homosexuality was PART of their sin, but so was rape. Without both of these combined, we do not have a complete picture of the sin of Sodom.
I’m not saying gay sexual activity is not a very grave matter, but I don’t think that, by itself, it’s so many orders of magnitude worse than other grave sins (especially sexual ones) as you suggest here.
Imagine if someone said “I have a deep-seated desire to kill others/oppress the poor/cheat widows and orphans…I hope you don’t reject me because of this”. I’m sorry, but I think most people would say “I think you might need to see a priest and a psychiatrist. I’ll pray for you, but I’m afraid I can’t help you!”
This is irrelevant in light of the above, but still, I’ll respond, so that even if you still hold to the “Sin of Sodomy is any gay act whatsoever” definition you can see that I am not holding a double standard: In all of those cases except possibly “deep-seated desire to kill” I would not shy away from the person. Even with the desire to kill, I wouldn’t try to shame the person or make him feel rejected (for a sin he clearly wants to resist), it’s just that he poses an immediate and lethal threat to me if, in the heat of the moment, he loses his wits and gives in, so I would at the very least have to avoid situation where he would have that opportunity for my own safety, etc. But certainly for the other things on that list, you bet I’d be willing to remain friends with such a person, to hear his woes, to be his confidante; yes, I’d charitably recommend that he seek a priest and some professional help, but that’s NOT mutually exclusive with remaining his loyal and charitable companion and Christian brother. That does NOT mean that I have to avoid him as if he might at any moment shoot me between the eyes. I may not want to work for the one tempted to cheat employees, and I may not want to vote for the one who is tempted to oppress widows and orphans, but the context of their temptations does not make them an immediate threat to me just from my being their loyal friend. It’s just the same for a person who struggles with SSA, unless “raping” people is also a deep seated part of his temptations.