Biblically, there is nothing wrong with homosexuality anyway. It's not a concept or subject that is covered. Every verse used as evidence is taken out of context.
The most quoted verse is Leviticus 18:22, "..man lie with another man is abomination." But nobody quotes 18:21 to get the context. 21 speaks about child sacrifice and mentions somebody named Molech. Seems like a rather odd lead-in to condemn homosexuality, huh? However, if you know the actual history here, Molech was a Canaanite god that many of the Israelites kept going back to worship.
His fertility ritual included a parent sacrificing one of their children, and then having ritual sex with a temple prostitute. Since many of these shrine prostitutes were men, the father would have anal sex with them. Indeed, the word 'abomination' used there is the Hebrew tow`ebah, which means a detestable thing, but has heavy implications of idolatry. It doesn't make sense to say that homosexuality is idolatry, but it does to say taking part in a fertility ritual to worship Molech is idolatry.
Another popular verse is Romans 1, where it mentions that man had become so wicked that God gave the people over to depravity, to where they abandoned their natural desires for unnatural ones. Also, there is the story of Sodom and Gomorrah. I mention these both because they are actually related.
Take Romans in context... here Paul is giving the Romans a history lesson, of how mankind back in the beginning turned against God and worshiped other spirits and became depraved. This is going all the way back to when God first turning against mankind with the great flood during Noah's time. Now go back and read Genesis 6 to see what lead up to the flood. It speaks of mankind's wickedness, but it specifically mentions something else... that the "Sons of God" lusted after the "daughters of men." This is referring to angels procreating with humans, creating the race of giants, the half-angelic/demonic race known as the Nephilim.
Now let's look at the story of Lot's guests while he was staying in Sodom, used to say that Sodom's sin was homosexuality. Two messengers from God come to visit Lot to deliver a warning. While there, some men outside demand that Lot turn these men over to them so they can have sex with them. Lot refuses, because it is a big taboo in Hebrew culture to dishonor your guests, so he gives the mob his daughters to rape instead (what a great dad!) Those who are anti-gay say that the men wanted to have sex with Lot's male guests therefore they were gay, but that doesn't make sense because they happily raped his daughters instead. Others try to defend homosexuality and say the issue was that they wanted to rape somebody. The real truth, however, is that Lot's guests were ANGELS. God doesn't really care about homosexuality (or sadly, rape for that matter, a few shekels will cover that) but he does get really pissed when humans have sex with angels. Pissed enough to flood the entire world.
Now, is this a fluke that I'm making a huge leap to connect, or is there some other evidence to show that I'm correct in asserting that this is the actual context, and both these are linked? Well, if you look at the apocryphal book known as the Testament of Naphtali, it says:
"25 The Gentiles went astray, and forsook the Lord, and charged their order, and obeyed stocks and stones, spirits of deceit.
26 But ye shall not be so, my children, recognizing in the firmament, in the earth, and in the sea, and in all created things, the Lord who made all things, that ye become not as Sodom, which changed the order of nature.
27 In like manner the Watchers also changed the order of their nature, whom the Lord cursed at the flood, on whose account He made the earth without inhabitants and fruitless."
Again, we have the same language Paul used in Romans 1, how mankind turned against God and worshiped spirits and idols. Then it uses the same language of 'changing the order of nature', and it specifically links the events of Sodom and the flood. 'Watchers' here refers to angels. Both men and angels changed the natural order by lusting after each other. So, this isn't a modern interpretation of linking these events, but rather something that made sense to the people back when Romans was written.
So, to recap:
1) God hates idolatry. This is one of the most common themes in the Bible.
2) God also apparently hates interspecies sex between men and angelic beings.
Maybe we need a godhatesnephilim.com?
Diablo 3 is an abomination! (Not specifically because of the demon stuff, because of the main character being a halfbreed!)
3) God doesn't seem to care about homosexuality (or masturbation for that matter) enough to really write about either one. Knock yourselves out!