Christians assert certain things. That is what being a Christian
means. They assert that God exist, that Jesus rose from the dead, that
God gave the Ten Commandments, etc. That means they are, by definition,
also maintaing that the claim that God does not exist, the claim that
Jesus did not rise form the dead, and the claim that God did not give
the ten commandments, are false. If you affirm one claim,you deny its
contradictory. That is what it means to say something. It is not
tolerant, but incoherent, to maintain both that Jesus rose from the
dead, and that Jesus did not rose from the dead. The same is going to be
true if you, for example, believe that evolution is true, or that tthe
2020 election was not stolen, or if you believe that vaccines are an
effective response to COVID-19 that people ought to receive if they can.
If you believe these things, then you believe that it is false to say
that evolution is false, it is false to say that the 2020 election was
stolen, and it is false to say that vaccines are an effective response
to COVID-19 that people ought to receive if they can.
The law of noncontradiction is not intolerance. it is simple logic.
Now, what do we think of people who hold false positions? Are
Christians harsher to people who disagree with them that non-Christians?
I wonder what the evidence is for that kind of a claim? It is true that
for lots of people,including Christians, the truth matters.