Biblia

Hating, Hatred

Hating, Hatred

Hating, Hatred

HATING, HATRED.Although the noun does not occur in the Gospels, yet the verb () is often found. The passages may be grouped as follows: (1) those which speak of the worlds hatred to Christ and His people; (2) those dealing with the Old Law, and Christs hatred of sin; (3) those which prescribe hate; (4) some remaining passages.

1. The world being opposed, according to St. Johns use of the term, to all that is of the Father (1Jn 2:16), it was inevitable that the holy and sinless Jesus should arouse its antipathy; and this is specially noted in the Fourth Gospel. The world hated Him because He testified that its deeds were evil (Joh 7:7). Its instinctive opposition to the light as manifested in Him was immediately aroused (Joh 3:20). Thus He said the world hath hated me (, Joh 15:18), the perfect tense expressing a persistent abiding feeling, not any isolated manifestation of feeling (Westcott); and it was without a cause (, Joh 15:25), cf. Psa 35:19; Psa 69:4; no reason could be found for such hostility except that He condemned its wickedness. This hatred carried with it hatred of the Father also (Joh 15:23), in which character He had revealed God to men, cf. Joh 15:24 they have both seen and hated both me and my Father; therefore they had no excuse for their sin, perhaps here the special sin of hatred to Him and His (Alford). Cf. in the parable of the Pounds, his citizens hated him (Luk 19:14).

Christs disciples consequently may expect to experience the same hatred in proportion as they truly follow their Lord (Joh 15:18-20). When they came before the world, it showed at once and decisively its position of antagonism to the gospel (, hated, Revised Version NT 1881, OT 1885 Joh 17:14) (Westcott), the ultimate cause being that men had no true knowledge of Him who sent Jesus (Joh 15:21). He foretold that they should be hated of all men for His Names sake (Mat 10:22 ||), more precisely of all nations (Mat 24:9); cf. for its fulfilment Act 12:3; Act 28:22, 1Th 2:14-15; 1Pe 2:12; Tacitus, Ann. xv. 44, quos per flagitia invisos vulgus Christianos appellabat; Suetonius, Nero, xvi., Christiani, genus hominum superstitionis novae et maleficae. In so far as the world-spirit crept in among the disciples, there would be similar exhibitions of hatred among themselves (Mat 24:10); cf. Gal 5:15, 1Jn 3:15, the deadly hatred of the Judaizers towards St. Paul, and the name apparently given to him in the Pseudo-Clementines. The worlds hatred, however, should be a cause of rejoicing (Luk 6:22), and not of wonder (1Jn 3:13, where if, as in Joh 15:18, implies no doubt of the fact). The disciples might well suspect their loyalty if they escaped the enmity of those who hated their Lord (Joh 7:7), while their experience of it was a proof that they had been chosen out and united to Him (Joh 15:19-20), as also a pledge of their future glory (Rom 8:17, 2Ti 2:12; 1Pe 4:13); Christianos quoque aut summo amore prosequuntur homines ant summo odio. Qui omnibus semper placent, sibi merito suspecti esse debent (Bengel).

Groups (2) and (3) raise an apparent difficulty: the feeling which is forbidden in the one seems commanded in the other. Westcott has a valuable note on 1Jn 2:9 which suggests the solution; there is a certain ambiguity in the word hate, for it serves as the opposite both to the love of natural affection () and to the love of moral judgment (). In the former case hatred, which may become a moral duty, involves the subjection of an instinct; in the latter case hatred expresses a general determination of character. Thus as opposed to is condemned (Mat 5:43 f., Eph 5:28-29, 1Jn 2:9-10; 1Jn 3:14-15; 1Jn 4:20), while as opposed to it may become a duty (Luk 14:26, Mat 10:37, Joh 12:25).

2. Ye have heard that it was said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour and hate thine enemy: but I say unto you, Love your enemies (Mat 5:43); do good to them that hate you (Luk 6:27, omitted by best authorities in Mt.). The first part of the maxim is found in Lev 19:16; but in the latter clause Jesus is not quoting precisely any OT or extra-Biblical utterance on record (cf. Sir 18:13) (Hasting’s Dictionary of the Bible , Extra Vol. p. 30). The question then arisesIs it a fair deduction from, and does it represent the spirit of, the OT, or is it an unwarranted extension and addition of the scribes? In favour of the latter it is urged that this hatred is not conceived of as following in Lev 19:18, and that passages much nearer the Christian standard are found. The utmost consideration was to be shown even to an enemys beast (Exo 23:4); the fact that the owner cherished hate was no reason why help should be refused to him in his trouble (Exo 23:5). Cf. as to rejoicing over an enemy in calamity, Job 31:29; as to returning evil for evil, Pro 24:29; and as to the better spirit often shown in OT, Gen 45:1 f., 1Sa 24:7, 2Ki 6:22, Psa 7:4; Psa 35:13. Jewish sages ordained that if a man finds both a friend and an enemy in distress, he shall first assist his enemy, in order to subdue his evil inclination; and held that it is not permitted to hate any one except only sinners who, having been duly warned and admonished, do not repent (Kalisch on Leviticus, quoted in Alexander, The Witness of the Psalms to Christ and Christianity, p. 274). Pro 24:17; Pro 25:21-22 are sometimes quoted as approaching the Christian spirit, but the reason given in each case militates considerably against their force (lest the Lord see it and it displease him, and he turn away his wrath from him, and the Lord shall reward thee). Hence some suppose that hate thine enemy was an illegitimate inference (pessima glossa, Bengel) drawn by Rabbis from the precepts laid down concerning the Amalekites and other nations under the curse (Exo 23:23 f., Deu 7:1 f., Deu 23:3, Deu 25:17 f.); by giving to neighbour the sense of friend, and taking enemy as meaning a private enemy, they were easily turned into a justification of private hatred. On the other hand, it is held by many that this clause was really implied in Lev 19:18 and truly expressed the spirit of OT. The election of Israel, taken with the rules concerning the above nations, would foster an aversion to foreigners which was ever increasing in intensity; cf. Psalms 83, Jon 3:10 to Jon 4:11, Est. In time the Jews came to have such a profound contempt and disregard for all others as caused them to be charged with being enemies of the human race (apud ipsos fides obstinata, misericordia in promptu, sed adversus omnes alios hostile odium, Tac. Hist. v. 5, 2; non monstrare vias eadem nisi sacra colenti, Juv. Sat. xiv. 103). Therefore Bp. Gore holds (Sermon on Mount, p. 97) that we must accept Mozleys conclusions, which are as follows,The whole precept, as it stands, undoubtedly represents, and is a summary of, the sense of the Law; nor is there any occasion to refer it hath been said to the Law in the case of Love thy neighbour, and to the tradition of the scribes in the case of Hate thine enemy: all the other precepts which the Lord takes as instances of an inferior morality are precepts out of the Law, and there is no reason to distinguish this particular one from the rest with respect to its source. In the first place, it applied to neighbour and enemy in a national sense, and tended to strengthen the union of Israelites; it was the inculcation of an esprit de corps which was the very bond of, and incentive to, union in the early ages. But it also referred to a private enemy, and was conceived in the general spirit of retaliation (cf. Mat 5:38 and such Psalms as 109).

It is evident from Mat 5:44 that Jesus took enemy as meaning a private enemy, who in the new Kingdom is to be loved, and to whom good is to be done. He used , not , on which Tittmann (see Alford) says, , amare, pessimum quemquc vir honestus non potest; sed poterit eum tamen , i.e. bene ei cupere et facere quippe homo homini, cui etiam Deus benefaciat. Amor imperari non potest, sed dilectio. Cf. Clem. Alex. [Note: Alexandrian.] , and Aug. sic dilige inimicos ut fratres optes, sic dilige inimicos ut in societatem tuam vocentur, sic enim dilexit ille qui in cruce pendens ait, Pater ignosce illis, quia nesciunt quid faciunt. According to the teaching of Christ, therefore, the hatred of sin only is permissible, which is the necessary corollary of the Gospel of Love, and is according to His own example; cf. Heb 1:9, Rev 2:6, where Lyra remarks (see Alford), non dixit Nicolaitas, sed facta: quia personae sunt ex charitate diligendae, sed eorum vitia odio sunt habenda.

3. Luk 14:25-26, Jesus turned and said unto the multitude, If any man cometh unto me, and hateth not his own father, and mother, and wife (peculiar to Luke), and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple; cf. Mat 10:37 He that loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; and Joh 12:25 He that loveth his life loseth it, and he that hateth his life in this world shall keep it unto life eternal. We may at once dismiss such an interpretation as Renan put forward, viz. that Christ was here despising the healthy limits of mans nature, warring against the most legitimate cravings of the heart, and preaching a total rupture with the ties of blood. The whole tenor of His life and teaching is against such an idea. He forbade hatred even of an enemy (Luk 6:27); He condemned evasion of the Fifth Commandment (Mar 7:9-12), and taught the sanctity of the marriage bond (Mar 10:2-9); He showed tender thought for His mother (Joh 19:25 f.), and loved children (Mar 10:13 f.); His new commandment was that ye love one another, as I have loved you (Joh 13:34). St. John certainly did not understand Luk 14:26 in Renans sense (1Jn 2:9; 1Jn 2:11; 1Jn 3:15; 1Jn 3:17; 1Jn 4:16; 1Jn 4:20); nor St. Paul (Eph 5:28, 1Ti 5:8, Tit 2:4, Rom 13:8), who would regard those acting in such a way as without natural affection, a vice of the heathen (Rom 1:31).

Some have given to hate in these passages the meaning of love less, comparing Gen 29:30-31, Deu 21:15; but it follows from the above that Jesus cannot have intended to condemn any degree of right affection as if it amounted to loving others more than Him. The love which Christ condemneth differs not in degree, but in kind, from rightful affection. It is one which takes the place of love to Christ, not which is placed by the side of that of Christ. For, rightly viewed, the two occupy different provinces. Wherever and whenever the two affections come into comparison, they also come into collision (Edersheim, Life and Times, i. 650). There is a foolish affection which would do injury both to the giver and the receiver (cf. Pro 13:24), and then hate is not only consistent with, but absolutely necessary for, the highest kind of love. It is that element in love which makes a wise and Christian friend not for time only, but for eternity.

The words had special application to the time when they were spoken, and must have sounded strange to the multitude, which, for the most part, was following because of that very love of life which is condemned, desiring to get material benefits (cf. Joh 6:26). Jesus enemies were becoming more violent, divisions in families would take place (Mat 10:34-36; cf. Exo 32:26 f., Deu 33:9), and discipleship would in many cases be impossible without the renunciation of the dearest ties. The mission field affords a parallel nowadays, where the hostility of relatives is often the greatest hindrance to the confession of Christ. The statement is made in the most startling form to arrest attention; conditions must be supplied as in Mat 5:29 f. Even where renunciation is not outwardly necessary, there must be potential alienation and the acknowledgment of Christs claims as paramount. The key to the true explanation lies in yea and his own life also (cf. Joh 12:25), it is presupposed that friendship is a source of enjoyment for ourselves; Jesus does not indicate a course of action whereby we do evil to others, but such as constitutes a painful sacrifice for ourselves (Wendt). At bottom our own life only, the last citadel (Job 2:4), is to be hated, and everything else only in so far as it partakes of this principle of sin and death (Godet); secundum eam partem, secundum quam se ipsum odisse debet, a Christo aversam (Bengel). He that so prizes his life that he cannot let it out of his own hand or give it up to good ends, checks its growth, and it withers and dies; whereas he who treats it as if he hated it, giving it up freely to the needs of others, shall keep it to life eternal (Dods, Expositors Greek Test.). Nec tamen sufficit nostra relinquere, nisi relinquamus et nos (Gregory, Hom. xxxii.).

Westcott on Heb 7:3 quotes a striking passage from Philo which throws light on Luk 14:26; he describes the Levites as being in some sense exiles who to do Gods pleasure had left parents and children and brethren and all their mortal kindred, and continues , . For the abstraction of the sinful desire to injure from the word hate, leaving in it nothing but an aversion of a purely moral kind, Wendt compares the use of violence and force in Mat 11:12, where they are used only so far as they denote energetic seizure and appropriation, but not the unlawfulness of this seizure.

4. Other passagesMat 6:24 = Luk 16:13 No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one and love () the other; or else he will hold to the one and despise the other. Here also hate must get its full meaning in order to bring out the opposition and the division of the mans nature who attempts to serve both God and mammon. The change of words in the second part is remarkable ( for . and for ), non dixit odiet sed contemnet: sicut solent minas ejus postponere cupiditatibus suis, qui de bonitate ejus ad impunitatem sibi blandiuntur (Aug.); to which Trench addsNo man actually and openly professes to hate God and love the devil; and therefore in the second clause, when the Lord is putting the converse case, He changes both words, which would be no longer the most appropriate; the sinner holds to Satan when he follows his rewards; he practically despises God when he heeds not His promises and His threatenings; however little he may acknowledge to himself or to others that he is doing either this or the other.

Luk 1:71, salvation from our enemies and from the hand of all that hate us, exhibits a parallelism with no particular distinction between the clauses, cf. Psa 18:17; Psa 106:10.

Literature.Bethune-Bakers art. Hatred in Hasting’s Dictionary of the Bible ; Votaws art. Sermon on the Mount, ib. Extra Vol.; Trench, Exposition of the Sermon on the Mount, also Studies in the Gospels (No. 12); Wendt, Teaching of Jesus, ii. 6570; Mozley, Lectures on the Old Testament (Lect. viii.); Finlayson, Expositor, i. ix. [1879] 420 f.; Dykes, Manifesto of the King, p. 311 ff.; Butler, Serm. viii. ix.; Seeley, Ecce Homo, ch. 21.; Martensen, Chr. Eth. ii. 118 ff.; Gardner, Conflict of Duties, 133148.

W. H. Dundas.

Fuente: A Dictionary Of Christ And The Gospels