AITA for pretending to not know who Jesus is? To some guy from work who tried to lecture me at the bar.
A lesbian woman at a work happy hour found herself targeted by a homophobic coworker who tried to lecture her about hiding her sexuality—to avoid offending Jesus Christ. Due to hearing difficulties in a noisy bar and an initial misunderstanding, she repeatedly asked him to clarify who this problematic person was.
What makes the story more complicated is that once the penny dropped, she leaned into the confusion and playfully pretended to be shocked by his “cussing,” turning the tables on the preacher. The encounter ended with him storming off in frustration, leaving her amused but wondering if she went too far by poking the bear.

‘AITA for pretending to not know who Jesus is? To some guy from work who tried to lecture me at the bar.’
At a crowded bar with new coworkers, a man approached her with a warning about being openly gay.






She kept asking for clarification, still believing he was warning her about a bigoted colleague.



The revelation hit, and she turned his religious lecture into playful outrage over his language.








This encounter showcases a clever, low-risk way to deflect workplace homophobia while highlighting the absurdity of using religion to justify prejudice. The initial misunderstanding stemmed from genuine hearing difficulty and a reasonable assumption based on past positive experiences with ally warnings—demonstrating how queer people often navigate safety networks in hostile environments.
Once aware of the true intent, the poster’s shift to feigning offense at “cussing” cleverly flipped the script, forcing the coworker to repeatedly invoke the name he wielded as a weapon. What makes the story more complicated is the ethical gray area of prolonging the pretense for amusement, yet it served as non-confrontational resistance that ended the interaction without escalation.
Socially, such incidents reflect ongoing challenges for LGBTQ+ individuals in conservative regions, where subtle (or not-so-subtle) pressure to stay closeted persists. Her handling avoided direct conflict while documenting the behavior for potential HR follow-up, balancing self-protection with sharp-witted pushback. The widespread community approval underscores how humor can disarm bigotry without granting it legitimacy.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
Many users celebrated the poster’s quick thinking and found the entire exchange hilarious.







Several commenters urged her to report the incident to HR while praising her handling.




A few added empathy for her hearing struggles or sharp jabs at the coworker’s hypocrisy.
![[Reddit User] − Oh my god, as an ex-evangelical Christian turned lesbian that is hilarious! I am totally using that. “Jesus? Does he work in the shipping department or something?...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1767518414293-1.webp)

The poster skillfully turned an uncomfortable homophobic confrontation into a memorable shutdown, earning widespread approval for both the humor and the boundary-setting. While she worried about “poking the bear,” her playful pretense safely defused the situation and exposed the coworker’s intolerance.
Have you ever used humor or feigned ignorance to deflect bigotry—did it work, or backfire? What’s your go-to strategy when a coworker crosses the line outside work hours? Share your stories and tips below.
