Can't the same be said of the Quran which is as debated as the bible? I know plenty of Muslims who don't agree with extremism, isn't it possible they're overlooking the outrageous verses the same way Chrisians overlook the bible's outrageous verses?
You post on a website where men discuss sexually abusing other men who are asleep, does that criminalize you by default? The "Quran" argument seems based on the notion that to be a Muslim you HAVE to follow the book verbatim.
No, the same can't be said of the Quran, because by design it comes very close to being a recipe book: everything in it is on equal footing, since it all came from the mouth of the Prophet,
That's not true in the Bible, even in the Old Testament, where one covenant superseded another, where former things were explained by later prophets, slowly urging the Hebrews/Israelites toward greater understanding of mercy and faithfulness. Then in the New Testament, it's all boiled down to love -- love your neighbor as yourself, treat others as you want to be treated, love your enemies, pray for those who persecute you; those are the things that the Bible teaches, and the others are history, to be looked at and understood as the steps toward something greater which they are (as Paul so elegantly illustrates in a couple of places).
Real Christians don't overlook the Bible's outrageous verses, they just understand that the Old is old, and has been superseded by the New. Picking selected verses out of the Old Testament means absolutely nothing; that's the Fred Phelps school of interpretation, and it's as foolish in the mouths of gays as it is in his -- rather, more foolish, because we object when he does it to us (though usually the objections are ignorant, with no more understanding of the Bible than he has).
The Quran argument is about the Quran and what that means about the religion of Islam; it has nothing to do with particular Muslims. I haven't said anything about Muslims in general, nor even any particular Muslims except those illustrated in the movie
Fitna.
This is just a matter of clear thinking. When I'm accused here of bashing Muslims, it's as though I'd pointed out an error in an electrician's handbook -- and on that basis it's concluded that I'm bashing "all electricians", when in fact I hadn't even said a word about electricians. With regard to this thread, which is about the Muslim religion, not about Muslims, I could care less if there even are any Muslims, really; my interest is in the book, and whether it shows that Islam is a peaceful religion.
And what it shows is that it is not.