(Read Psalm 139)
The command to love your neighbor as yourself doesn't mean to have a positive self-image or high self-esteem. It means using the same zeal, ingenuity and perseverance to pursue your neighbor’s happiness as you do your own. And the same goes for those people who seem to do whatever it takes to get under our skin. If love among the people of God is to truly reflect God’s love, it will have to include the same love for their enemies as they freely give to friends and family, at least to some degree. This isn't just a New Testament Jesus concept, this love example is all throughout the Old Testament, “Do not rejoice when your enemy falls” (Proverbs 24:17). “If your enemy is hungry, give him bread to eat” (Proverbs 25:21). It's not for the people of God to hate their enemies so much so that it kills their joy and removes the transformative power of love.
Our enemies schemes should not so deeply, and so completely cause us to hate them that we become perfectly bitter (Psalm 139:19-22). God works on our behalf to protect the people of God in the ways he knows will yield the greatest benefit for them and their enemies, we know this and we must run to it when we're feeling low, dark, and angry about the state of things.
I know this is the kind of attitude God want for us. I know it. But to be honest, I struggle with bitterness towards many who seem to work hard against righteousness and liberty. I am thinking of the many sorts of social compromises we're seeing all around us. People who are hypocritical and selfish. The dark, bloody stain of abortion and the sad, soul-crushing consequences of approving that and other behaviors that God condemns. I feel concerns for our government that is sinking into socialism and a growing bloated totalitarian bureaucratic state filled with corruption.
I read the words of David that “I hate them with perfect hatred.” In Psalm 139, and I have to confess I'm right there with him. But am I? Maybe I'm missing something about "perfect hatred". And in the context of David's statement about perfect hatred, he was also extolling all the glorious things of God in one breath, and then in the next moment, he's burning with hated, perfect hatred, his mind is filled with utmost hate for people who work against God's will. But what is that? Is it hatefulness for people?
Think about that kind of zeal for God's work. David is so completely overwhelmed with God's awesomeness that he perfectly hates those people who are hating on God. God’s enemies are David’s enemies. And what does God say? Love your enemies. But maybe it's still not clear what's truly going on here in David's perfect hatred.
We know the Bible is one, Old and New Testament, one book. And we know that Jesus told us to love our enemies. So we're left with a crisis, right? On the one hand we feel what David felt but we desire also to follow Jesus' example.
Maybe at this point in the devotion it would be good to hear some reason from another as we're all rolling our eyes thinking about forgiveness for God's and our enemies.
E.J. Young, (Reformed theologian and an Old Testament scholar)
“Unless we walk with God, depending upon Him for all things, our hatred will be the wrong kind of hatred, and the wrong kind of hatred is sin”
Okay then. That cuts to the quick.
So...does this mean there are right kinds of hatred?
Maybe what David means to say is his attitude about his hatred is perfect? I mean, it boils down to what you do with it, right? Maybe a perfect hatred is expressed when one’s own life is being presented to God for His inspection. A heart check. Maybe that's why David begins and ends this Psalm with “Search me.”
In his perfect hatred David drew close to God in prayer. While there he gets caught up in awe and wonder for all of God's glorious might. And he's probably filled with murderous thoughts at the same time for those who hate God. He explains to God his perfect hate. And he explains that his hatred is not a hatred that is vicious and seeks retribution on account of his own personal lose. It is a hate that desires earnestly that the entire world of evil people should bow down and join in the worship of his glorious and gracious God. He hates their devilish ways and wants them to have a come to Jesus moment. His perfect hatred wants conversion for those who work against all that is right and good.
Do we not hate the sins of the world that nailed Jesus to a Roman cross?
Of course we do.
Especially those compromised priests who sought his execution, and the fickle mobs of people who turned on him after professing love for him just days before.
We absolutely, perfectly hate them.
Those corrupt hypocrites and selfish politicians. We want all the crimes of sinful, godless humanity to stop poisoning our country. We hate what they're doing to our generations of children. We hate their prideful celebrations and blatant disregard for all things holy. We especially hate their secular worship that permeates everything nowadays.
And we hate when we hear Jesus' words from that Roman cross, “Father, forgive them, they know not what they do.”
Come on now...you know you can't love that he said that, right?
Not that. Forgive them? Not them.
Come on now Jesus. We love you and what you did, but them? No. Never. 👎🏻
But you know what? God, in saying those words, has shown us all what perfect love looks like. And perfect loves overcomes and surpasses perfect hatred. Our deepest expression of hatred has been surpassed in an incalculable way by God’s own hatred for sin. God hates in perfect hate. Indeed, it is impossible for us sinners to “hate” as perfectly as God hates. But God’s hate comes, in love and grace, against His own Son rather than against Man. As Jesus was hanging there on that cross speaking those words of forgiveness, he was looking out over the mobs. And there we all are looking back at him. We're all there in that crowd in all our sins. And he's forgiving us as we're standing there.
We can know perfect hatred. Our hatred is perfected by our own admission of sin, the sins that put him up there on that cross. As we stand there looking back at Jesus forgiving us from his cross, we come to see ourselves not as one with this holy God but still apart from Him. And so we say, “Search me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts: And see if there be any wicked ways in me, and lead me in the ways everlasting” (Psalms 139:23-24). We cry out for the covering of all our sins as we confess our love for Christ Jesus. We perfectly hate our sin, and cry out for perfect love.
Perfect hatred is hatred for our sins, not for the person, but for the sins of the people. Jesus forgave people, not their sins, he hated their sins. And he became what he hated, for their sakes he did that, from love , not hate, he did that. And for Jesus' sake, we the forgiven, are to seek the good of all people, and, if possible, restore them by kindness and good faith. We hate their enmity towards God, and we must strenuously confront their resentment in perfect hatred by looking at and extolling the many great and wondrous things about the perfect beauty of God. To win the hearts and minds of the enemy, not through war, but restoring peace.
I've witnessed perfect hatred working time after time. I know that in the Gospel there is hope that those who curse Jesus today shall preach Him tomorrow. Thus perfect hatred leads to perfect love and then ultimately perfect hope for a nation that is out of control hating on God.
Before we burn in our anger and hated towards those who hate God, take that seething hate and burn it in prayer. Pray, “Search me, O God, and know my heart..." Burn the incense of that prayer and pour its ashes all over your head. Perfect that hate in Jesus Christ. Burn it in your burning love for Christ's kingdom. Wear it as a reminder and testament of your own love for those who Christ forgives. Be perfect in your hatred and your love.