Do Rightly, Church, Regardless of Worldly Teaching, And Gain Power against Acts of Worldly Domination
A family farm has been banned at the farmer's market because they refused to host a homosexual wedding. What a tragedy, and what a control device wielded by the World! If that farm didn't officiate any weddings, then there would be issue in the first place, and the farmer's market wouldn't have any cause - even in their own minds - to mix business with individual choices like this choice to not do business; the farmer's market is choosing not to do business due to their ethical choice to exert pressure to change the farm's moral choice to not do business - the irony outlines the hypocrisy and ultimate failure of logic of the pressure.
One answer in this particular case would have been if the farm didn't do any of what society calls "marriage", which is a tax contract between exactly two people, and if they only did religious, Christian marriage, which is a particular, God-given action that brings two people of the opposite sex together, regardless of that social tax contract, then the farm wouldn't have been expected to carry out the homosexual Worldling's tax contract or its attendant ceremony, no matter what that contract and ceremony are named (that is, even if people call it after the God-given action called "marriage").
Separation from the World, even while being physically in the same space as Worldlings, is a helpful pattern for Christians to be set up to fight the World's desire to subvert Christ's Church. Being distinct, particular and absolute is an answer that, itself, the World has tried to separate us from by making it seem as though those things are bigoted and pull potential new Christians away from being born again. Christ absolutely separates Christians from the World, even when those Christians try to act like the World, because being alive in one's own spirit is absolutely separate from being dead in one's own spirit.
Know what things are, and do rightly, regardless of how the World has taught you up until now, dear Church.