Interviewee accidentally figures out Yahweh (whom the interviewer calls "God") is not the same as the God taught by the person on her cross:
https://twitter.com/ClownWorld_/status/1740217068455346392 (video at link)
For reference:
https://jameslhutton.com/2019/08/05/jesus-ate-with-tax-collectors-prostitutes-other-sinners-we-can-too/A woman who is a sinner comes to Jesus. He does not forbid her to do so.
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Simon is alarmed, and comes to the conclusion that Jesus isn’t a prophet. He couldn’t be one. He “…would have perceived who and what kind of woman this is who touches him, that she is a sinner” (Luke 7:39).
The implication of such a thought is that being touched by a sinner is a problem for the righteous. A real prophet would have kept himself from interacting with such a woman in that way. Maybe the Pharisees thought that when a sinner touches a righteous person it causes him or her to be unclean. There is no indication that Jesus held to such a teaching.
So no, Jesus definitely would not mind the interviewee wearing a cross.
The interviewer, like Simon, is thinking Judaically:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judaism_and_sexuality#Pornographypornography is prohibited by halakhic laws surrounding ****, with which it over goes hand-in-hand. Not only is the viewing of pornographic content forbidden by these laws, but so is the production of pornographic content. The Kitzur Shulchan Arukh prohibits the spilling of seed, thus forbidding that a man engage in sexual intercourse without the intention to conceive.
From a Gnostic (and hence authentically Christian) perspective, preventing conception is the key to defeating Yahweh. So to the extent that the content produced by the interviewee stochastically reduces interest in reproductive sex among her viewers, it is indeed Yahweh, not God, who more dislikes it.
Additional information:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_views_on_pornography#JudaismThis is further codified in the Code of Jewish Law,[59] which includes further prohibitions (based on the Talmud) such as "watching women as they do the laundry."
So, for the record, Judaism is anti-gravure as well.