You are about as funny as a three dollar bill. Christians don't hate sinners. We hate the sin because God hates it. Of course the evangelists were appalled by the sentences. However even the general public knows enough to find fault with the Catholic Church for allowing priests to abuse boys homosexually. I don't think the punishment for that should be any less than for a man raping a little girl.
I think homosexual acts in public should be treated the same way that hookers are treated. Lock them up for a day to remind them that society views their behavior as wrong.
You hate the sin, but you love the sinner, right?
Say if somebody you loved suddenly developed green eyes (sometimes they can change as someone grows up), and you didn't like that they had green eyes. Would you tell them every day, "I hate your green eyes."? Is that "loving" to you?
Do you remind anyone that you love, every day, of any faults about them that bother you? Do you really find that "loving?"
Would you want someone you love to remind you, every day, of the things that they hate about you?
Hell, would you want any random
stranger to come up to you, after seeing you do something that they don't approve of and doesn't actually affect them, and tell you that they don't like it? Would that be something that you find appropriate?
I dunno about you, but I'd find that, not only un-loving, but also arrogant, bigoted, and insulting.
I've heard of only one Christian that actually practices what they preach. And she is the mother of a lesbian Wiccan. She still loves her daughter with all her heart. And she makes no signs of disapproval when she sees her. She even attended a gay pride parade, and gave a hug to every homosexual she met.
She practices what Jesus taught. To love everyone.
Besides, isn't it "God's" judgment that matters in the end, anyway? What's the use of passing judgment in one's mortal life when, in reality, what one says won't matter anyway? It just takes up time and energy that one
could be using for other things. Things that actually have to do with
one's own life rather then someone else's, which nobody else has any business in.