If it was a family baking and selling cakes to other family members or a grandma baking cakes for her ladies auxiliary at church, all you said applies. But, the bakers chose to do business with the public and thereby opening themselves up to the laws of the public. Don't get me wrong, I don't condone the long arm of Uncle Sam reaching in here (read my posts on classic liberalism) but if we have to render this part of a business unto Caesar, then we render unto God our duty to evangelize and be so upfront with our witness than none can deny it. A businessman can't be a closet believer then pull out the believer card just for homosexuals. Is he baking cakes for young, fornicating sweet sixteen parties? Is he baking cakes for pedophiles? Are his cakes ending up in the hands of rapists, embezzlers, drug dealers...does he even know? We have to remember that Jesus engaged all manner of sinners in his walk. He always pointed out their sins, but he engaged with them...he "ate with sinners".I'm not going to burn you in effigy but I would point out that everything involved in the cake issue is private until suddenly in the end it's not. The tools, the ingredients, the baker's time, the delivery van, everything was private property up until the very end when the government didn't like what they the baker did. The gay couple came on to private property, and forced a private citizen to work for them against his will and use his private tools and ingredients to do it. I never could figure out when this whole thing got into the public sphere.
Just trying to put another spin on it and get others to think. That's the beauty of BF