From my perspective, as a Christian, it feels pretty specifically to be Christian queerphobia.
In The High Republic, there is a Force cult called The Path of the Open Hand, which believes that any use of the Force, even for good, will leave something else bereft. They demand that Force sensitives suppress themselves or some unknown spirit will enact retribution on the world.
We get an entire book of a Jedi and a member of this cult having a philosophical debate, and it's something that may start off sounding like a benign disagreement, but the moment that the Path has the power to eradicate the people they have labeled as the dangerous other (in direct contrast to the people's actual actions), they wield it and call it the will of the divine.
(also the arguments just rang loudly with the same energy of the transphobic Bible-bashing I received from other Christians)
Furthermore, the leader of this cult has a daughter who is a Jedi, and it feels very strongly like those parents who claim that queerness "took" their kid from them.
However, everything I listed above wasn't our introduction to the Path at all. We were first introduced to them and their philosophy through through their future remnants.
The Path of the Open Hand ends up splitting into two factions: the Nihil and the Elders of the Path, and here it's not accidental subtext. It's blatantly queer.
There is a teenager - Zeen Mrala - who lived with the Elders of the Path, who has been closeting herself and her Force sensitivity because of the beliefs of the Path. Then, in the first issue of The High Republic Adventures (2021) comic, she meets Jedi, sees that they are living their Force-sensitive lives freely and using it to better the galaxy. So she steps in to help them, and uses the Force.
She's forced to leave the Path, and her best friend from there chooses to follow the more extreme Nihil, feeling betrayed by Zeen keeping this part of herself a secret. He even tries to convince her to run away with him, using language similar to "we can just hide the fact that you're gay."
In going with the Jedi, she and a Jedi Padawan also develop little gay feelings for each other and it's really cute.
Basically, The High Republic, through Zeen framed the Force as a direct metaphor for embracing your queer self. And then the series kicked us back in time to see the origins of the belief that oppressed her, where we learn that they are - in fact - the overarching villains wanting to exert their beliefs on the entire galaxy.
The overarching villain of this massive Star Wars era is religious queerphobia.