Sounds good to me.
I have no desire to respond to his twisted thinking. The main and fatal mistake is the assertion that if we don't love everyone, we must hate them all. I reject that in total.
I don't love most people I know. Not because of what they are but by how they act.
I have never, ever, not once, had a nervous breakdown because someone might think I'm a heterosexual. Sounds silly? That is the crux of the discussion, because I have never felt the need to announce the fact that I am hetero. I would seriously stay away from anyone else who felt the need. Does that reveal a flaw in my humanity or my faith? No in the least.
I would consider it a sign of a serious neurosis if a total stranger, or even a casual acquaintance announced that he is a scratch golfer or an expert tennis player. No jusdgement involved, no love or hate involved, no religion involved.
Attempting to make me feel guilty for using my human faculties of dicrimination and choice isn't going to work
I can end my responce with the reality that I have friends who are gay. Most of them I was not aware of for years and I strongly suspect some others yet remain unknown as gay, but "loved" no less than every other friend I've had.
Approach me with "in your face" attitude and you can go to hell. Totally detached from the religious sense.