We cannot edit out the verses that speak of God's hatred because they conflict with our modern sensibilities about love.
It’s more as if people
contextualise the verses of
“God’s hatred” because they conflict with the ultimate revelation of God seen through the life and healing ministry of Jesus Christ. Jesus is the perfect reflection of the Father, not the often hyperbolic Psalms that tell of God loving and hating people.
Psalms, proverbs, one or two of the first five books. They aren’t interpretive tools we need to read back into the story of Jesus to help level out God, history isn’t like that. History and the Bible are dynamic and unfolding, revealing more as we read on.
Refusing to read on and appreciate that is how people outside of Christianity get mixed up and try to debate Old Testament ethics all day with Christians trying to live in light of Christ’s love.
The clear portions of the biblical witness interpret the unclear portions
(1 principle) while later revelation often helps to interpret and illuminate the former ones
(2nd principle.)
So it’s up for every man to decide himself, what’s more clear, the widely contested
“Jacob I’ve loved but Esau I have hated,” “The boastful shall not stand before your eyes; you hate all evildoers.” Or the words
“Forgive them, Father. They know not what they do.”
Well, the first of two was from Paul
(notoriously hard to understand) and the second was from the Psalms
(song) book. In Romans Paul is quoting from an Old Testament text, but to get the meaning where God hates baby Esau requires that we believe Paul eisegeted the original texts, not exegeted.
I’m not interested in whether the verses travel this way or that
(not yet,) but rather I’m explaining the complexity of those verses in comparison to say
“Forgive them, Father.”
Absolute context in a much later historical book of the Bible that’s retelling the most important story ever told. Jesus is the exact likeness of the Father,
“God created all things, even the wicked for the day of trouble” isn’t the exact likeness of the Father, it’s a proverb.
When modern Christians believe there’s some kind of equal weigh of conflict between those two verses and that they must create a tension between love and justice to excuse the verses, they are saying in essence that a fortune cookie is as good a source of information as an entire life lived to the glory of God.
An ancient proverb or song doesn’t show humanity Gods character like how Jesus can show humanity Gods character.
Let’s make it less biblical. . .
Trying to understand Steve Tyler by listening to
“Dude looks like a lady” on repeat won’t get you anywhere near to the real thing, not compared to reading a biography of the man.
The notion that God hates the wicked is not simply something that comes from speculative theologies, Calvinist or otherwise. It comes directly from Scripture where God hates the one whose soul loves violence and various other evil doers.
The idea comes from theologians reading through the Bible and believing that dude looks like a lady demands place of preference alongside a documentary about Aerosmith. The problem is that those things don’t demand place of preference nor do they deserve that place, since that place is held by Jesus Christ.