It's difficult to respect a right that doesn't even exist. Saying that it exists doesn't magically make it exist. Stomping your foot real hard and saying it exists really, really forcefully doesn't, either.Be respectful of gay person right to marry.. you may not believe in it ...but be respectful..
This is known as the Straw Man logical fallacy, commonly found in highly charged, emotional debates where reason and intellect fail, where...If you went to your neighbors house and they asked you to join them in a satanic ritual you wouldn't because you don't believe in it. I'm not saying bowing your head is a satanic ritual but it is a ritual nevertheless... that I don't believe in....
Person 1 has position X,
Person 2 disregards certain key points of X and instead presents the superficially similar (and sometimes absurd) position Y,
Then Person 2 attacks the "Straw Man" position Y, concluding that X is false/incorrect/flawed.
In this case, you use not merely any old garden variety generic religious ritual (like saying grace before a meal), but a full-on, emotional-grabbing, extreme example of the evil satanic ritual (cue ominous music). That's literally trying to use the exception to the rule, to try and disprove the rule. It's lame-o.
But using your absurdly ridiculous example, if the neighbors were my friends, and depending on what the ritual was, I might very well play along and participate if it was something I might do on my own or in another setting with others. If it was something as simple as bowing my head while they said a prayer to Satan, yeah, sure I would participate, because I don't believe in any of it anyway and it's no skin off my nose. It's not like bowing my head and mentally reciting baseball statistics is gonna make me a devil worshiper. If the ritual involved sacrificing a well-used and harried ferret on an altar, I'd politely decline, excuse myself and go back home.