I can't say that it will, but I have a hard time believing that an 8-year-old, who said he was gay committed evil acts. He was 8 years old and just because he said it didn't mean that he absolutely was gay and surely did not act on those feelings.
I too would like to know what he did that was evil at 8 years old?
Pragmatically speaking, except for the most extraordinary cases of early puberty, I can't see how an 8-year-old could possibly be in violation of the command for a man to abstain from lying with a man, as with a woman—even in his heart, as per the Sermon On The Mount.
Also, legally speaking, a boy wasn't a man in the ancient Hebrew economy until he was twelve (also likely tied to the onset of puberty), and since the command for men to abstain from wearing that which pertained to women was specified as pertaining to a man, an 8-year-old could hardly be considered eligible to fall under that condemnation, either.
On the other hand, the general question of evil ability in an 8-year-old has a fairly obvious, I would think, answer. 8-year-olds are, in fact, capable of evil deeds, as a quick scroll through news aggregators will clearly reveal.
Alas, none of this, mental meandering is of any consequence, since Christians are not bound to a modern theocracy so no prescription of capital punishment for sin is valid.
Whatever the boy thought, said, or did, none of it was worthy of the heart-sickening treatment he endured, and the observation that the parents were in some way provoked is worthy of even less consideration.
But all of this is just so much smoke-filled, coffee house crap in the light of what critical gender theory is doing to the Western world.
Postmodernism is a philosophy of despair and critical theory, which springs from it, produces a society where no distinction is made between men except that of the oppressor and the oppressed.
Consequently, the very definition of sin becomes oppression, so only that which supports or is predicted to lead to oppression is called sin.
And so, all forms of Biblically-defined sin are acceptable as long as they are not perceived by the oppressed
(or their advocates) to oppress them.
Much is made of compassion and mercy but, for the oppressors, vengeance and (social) justice is all that can be afforded.
I too often find myself needing to apologize for my comments here on the forum. When I do so to those who value Biblical standards of conduct I'm nearly always received favorably. When I apologize to those who oppose them, I'm not even acknowledged.
I do not expect forgiveness, but I can't help having noticed this distinction.
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