I'll try and use less personal language so I won't hurt your feelings.
Good policy in general.
The "personal walk with God" defense of using the "hate the sin, love the sinner" ethical rule is nothing more than a mask for moral relativism.
Oh?
What was the policy of Jesus himself in this re guard?
Didn't Jesus complain that Johnthe Baptist was criticised for fasting a lot and keeping to himself , while he ,Jesus , took criticism for eating out with ordinary and sinfull people?
Like Zacheus who was a notorious sinner but was host to Jesus in his own home , Jesus loved Zacheus but when criticised for spending time with him he didn't complement Zacheus virtue , he said he was here to heal and like a physician he wasn't here to heal the already well , he was looking for sinners to heal.
Good points Plane, the problem is that you nor Sirs have been able to find the verse where "Jesus hated" or been able to connect Christian love with an unorthodox notion of "Christian hate."
I want to see the proof for that. It can be Biblical, traditional, historical...but show me how that works in Christian theology. Show me that this isn't exactly what I said it is.
Oh is that all you want?
I think that Jesus had a special feeling towards Hypocrisy , he was now and then so peeved at hypocritical speech and behavior that he was heard to spew flaming invective in the direction of those he considered hypocritical, "generation of vipers" ,for example. He would even resort to public ridicule or corporal punishment when the offense was severe enough . I don't know if the guys he was insulting in public or strikeing with a whip really understod how much of a love he had for their person.
He instructed his unarmed disciples to buy swords sell their clothes if they needed to, but buy a sword.
As far as I know the only thing he is recorded to have killed was a tree so I don't want to paint him as uncontrolled , but I think that when anger was appropriate, he was angry.
Did Jesus preach peace and forgiveness as being superior to anger and violence? Certainly he did ,when people say "Live by the soward, die by the soward" they are quoteing Jesus. But a lot of his preaching included warning of hell and that being disobedient and separated from God would buy you a ticket there. As he was dieing from a severe beating and crucifixion he prayed to God that his persecutors would be forgiven , because they know not what they do , he seemed to imply thateven the fellows who scurged and crucified him could hope for forgiveness , after all "...they know not what they do".
Jesus didn't like the idea of getting crucified , he prayed hard the previous night to have some other choice , if ever there was a sin that deserved for him to hate it and work against it the thouroughly predictable crucifixion would qualify , but because he was going to use the crucifixion as the vehicle of salvation for the people , he went through with it.
"greater love has no man than he that will give his life for his freind" seems true on the face of it and has deeper truth within it . Jesus who was as fully human as any other human and as fully capable of hatred as any of us told us flatly that none of us deserved salvation but for the sake of love he gave his life away , not holding back this salvation even from those whose personal activity caused him pain and death.