On the contrary, what I see in this thread is this particular person who is not a Baha'i depicting our position is the worst light.
I don't think he is referring to adherents as much as doctrine, and he has said nothing with which I disagree nor anything that has been refuted by any Baha'i. If you think his depiction is unfair and want to convince critical thinkers that you are correct, you'll need to make an evidenced argument. You would need to show words of his that he is doing that with, and explain why they are wrong or unfair. I understand your words to mean that you don't like what he's saying, not that he's inaccurate.
It is not about being gay, it is engaging in homosexual relations.
I'm sure that there are older or even religious gay couples that no longer engage in sexual relations but are still gay, but those two things mean essentially the same thing to me.
we are to help, advise and sympathise with people within our faith community who do this. The person who is gay within our faith is not encouraged to think badly of themselves.
That's to your credit, but it's irrelevant to the discussion, because it doesn't scrub the doctrine of its homophobic nature, which continues to inform its adherents that homosexuality is some kind of aberration or defect.
"No matter how devoted and fine the love may be between people of the same sex, to let it find expression in sexual acts is wrong.
And your reason seems to be because somebody said that a god told him that. To me, holding a belief for that reason is wrong.
As a believer, I find it understandable that those who are not religious don't understand that people who engage in homosexual acts harm themselves spiritually.
But they don't. I know many such people. I live in an expat community, so they are all retired and older. They are indistinguishable from the straight community except in their sexual preference. They are just as kind, happy, and generous as anybody else. Most are in long-term committed relationships. These are our friends.
We just ask for tolerance that we believe differently than you do.
I don't see any intolerance for adherents here. All of you here have been treated respectfully, as I'm doing now. It's the doctrine that is being condemned, but also to some extent the willingness to not repudiate it.
Basically anyone who does not 'approve and support our desure for same sex' is homophobic
No, anybody who accepts that homosexuals are somehow less than heterosexuals is homophobic. You don't need to approve of homosexually. You don't need to approve of any kind of sexuality. Nor do you need to support homosexuals or homosexuality, whatever that would look like. Just accept that homosexual people are not less than heterosexuals, and one is not homophobic. Otherwise, he or she is.
Sorry that so many Abrahamic theists resent the title homophobe, but I would suggest that each examine his beliefs (not feelings) and the secular world's definition of homophobia, and see if he or she fits that. If so, why not embrace the homophobia? If one finds that a fair, harmless, and reasonable way to think, then why not proudly announce that one is a homophobe according to that definition? I'm proud to announce to believers that according to their definition of sinner, I'm one, even though I don't accept the idea that sin as believers understand it exists.
I don't call myself a sinner, but most Christians, for example, would, and I have no problem with that. If impiety is sin to a believer, then OK, I'm a sinner in his eyes. Objecting vociferously at that makes no sense to me, and I'm not offended that somebody judges me by Christian or Baha'i standards, So how about you Baha'i? How about, "I don't feel homophobic, but if others describe me that way for the beliefs I gladly admit to, then OK, I'm a homophobe by his standards just as he is a sinner by mine."