March 22 2026
John 15:18-27, 16: 1-4
Needless to say, this ministry journey I have been on now for quite awhile, has been full of surprises. While most of the churches I have served have been very gracious and loving places to serve, there, nonetheless, have also been people in every church it seems that was very much the opposite of what one would expect. I guess what made this hatred and meanness so surprising is not that such behavior was found within the church. No, what has surprised me most is that the church has been the place where I have experienced the very worst from people even though I worked in warehouses and drove forklift for many years. You see, it wasn’t working out in the world where I found the angriest and meanest people; no, such behavior was more often than not, found within the body of Christ, not out of it. This behavior was not just aimed at me, no, some of the churches were mean and nasty even to the neighbors of their parsonage. I know this to be true because I actually listened to this neighbor and fixed an issue that he was dealing with in one afternoon that the church simply refused to deal with for three years. The only reason the church had for not being loving to their neighbor was just plain and simple, meanness.
Now what makes my discovery of such hatred and meanness within the church even more shocking is that the church is supposed to be for lack of a better term, a “hate-free”, zone. I mean if you actually read the owners manual, you will find, in places like the third chapter of the first letter of John, the thirteenth verse, this teaching: “Do not be surprised church that the world hates you. We know that we have passed out of death into life because of this reason: we have love for our brothers and sisters in Christ. Whoever does not love his brothers and sisters resides in death.” And then John writes this: “Everyone who hates his brother or his sister is a murderer. And no murderer has eternal life in them.” Now if we want to claim that we are Bible believing Christians, then verses such as these should really give us pause. You see, so many Christians love to claim that they do indeed have eternal life in them because they have said the prayer and they have invited Jesus into their hearts. But such easy assurance is called into account by this teaching of John who is clear that if we have hate in our hearts then there can be no eternal life residing in us as well.
You can understand then why this issue of hatred is an important one for us to consider during this season we call Lent. You see, Lent is a forty day period before Easter when those who wished to be baptized on Easter would have time to consider just what they are entering into when they would be lowered into the water. Baptism is a symbolic action which represents our death to this world and then a raising to a new life in the world to come. So as John teaches us, the way that the church is aware that a person has properly understood their baptism, their passing from death into life, is that now they have an undeniable love for their brothers and sisters in Christ. Gone from the life of the baptized is this hatred for others.
Now when we talk about hatred we have to first, define just what we mean when we say we hate someone. The word, “hate”, is as over used as other terms we have looked at like, “love”, and, “good”. Most of the time when we say we hate something we usually mean that we dislike it, that we don’t much care for it. But when the Bible uses this word, “hate”, we discover that this word has become defined in ultimate terms. I mean if you took your dislike, or disdain of someone to its ultimate conclusion, then it is easier to understand why John makes the leap from hatred of someone to the charge of murder. In John’s defense though, all he was doing was retelling what Jesus had first taught to him. If we go to Matthew five, verse twenty-one, we find Jesus telling us, “You have heard it said to those of old, ‘You shall not murder and whoever murders is liable to judgment. But I say to you that everyone who is merely angry with his brothers or sisters will be liable to judgment. And whoever would insult a brother or sister will be hauled before the tribunal; and whoever says to a brother of sister, “You fool!, will end up in eternal fire.” What Jesus is saying to us here is that we must keep our anger from hijacking our life. We must not allow our longing for retaliation for some hurt we have experienced to cause us to no longer hunger and thirst for righteousness, refusing to offer those who have hurt us mercy and forgiveness.
So, Jesus expects those of us who are living the good life to first, be aware of our anger with other people. We must realize the severe danger we are in any time we lose our cool, and get into that fight or flight mode. In the third chapter of the first letter of John, John asks us to consider the example of Cain, son of Adam and Eve and brother to Able. It was Cain, as we might recall, who committed the first murder when he took and hit his brother, Able in the head with a rock. While this was a terrible tragedy, what makes this story even worse is that God had tried to intervene. If you read at the beginning of the fourth chapter of Genesis, you will find that Cain became angry when God refused his offering of grain and instead accepted the lamb sacrificed by Able. God rejected Cain’s offering because he knew that Cain was offering the least amount possible because all he was trying to do was to manipulate God into giving him a greater harvest. Able instead gave an the sacrifice of a whole sheep which represented the giving of his whole self to God. Well, God’s action upset the plans of Cain, and God could see the anger of Cain as it was written all over his face. So God calls out to Cain, saying, “Cain, why is your face so angry? If you learn how to give, if you instead do the right thing, won’t I accept you? Yet, if you refuse to change and do the right thing, then God tells Cain, sin crouches at your door like a ravenous lion ready to devour you. Sin desires to have you and consume you, but Cain you must rule over sin.” Here we have the first mention of sin in the scriptures, and so we are to know that this sin is something greater than merely allowing our lives to be guided by our base desires as Adam and Eve discovered when they ate the forbidden fruit.No, here sin is being defined as this overwhelming urge within Cain to channel his anger directly at the life of his brother Able in order that the life of Able might be destroyed. This anger welled up in Cain because God refused to be at his beck and call, and since he could not kill God then Cain would would destroy the one God had accepted.
What the story of Cain and Able reveals to us is that anger wells up in us when we believe that life is found by taking by force whatever our heart desires. Cain believed, wrongly, that a greater harvest could be his if only he could force God to work for him. Able, on the other hand, rightly understood that life is found through the offering of ourselves fully to God as demonstrated by his offering of a lamb. The sin rising up within Cain was this urge to take life instead of being like God, having a desire to give life to all. Now, as great as this urge was welling up inside of Cain, God still knew that it did not have to take over complete control of Cain. The power of sin can be overcome by attacking it and putting it to death, something that we witness in real time at the cross.
You see, what must not be forgotten as we listen to Jesus tell us that the world will hate us, is that he is speaking to his disciples around the table where they have just heard that the bread which is broken is his body broken for them, and the cup is his blood poured out to give them life. Jesus will have his body be broken at the hands of the world because he has chosen to represent all those who have been judged worthy of condemnation by the world just as Cain first condemned Able. Through his being one the least of these, Jesus took upon himself the judgment of the world, the judgment based on the desires of the flesh, all the appetites, the lusts and the consuming desire for pride that fuel the world’s passion. There at the cross, the world judged the sinless Son of God not worthy of life, even though the very Law God had given to his people proved that Jesus had done absolutely nothing wrong, and was innocent of any sin. The death of Jesus witnesses to us that allowing our desires to lead us into sin is a life which must be put to death upon the cross.
So through his unity with all the innocent victims that have been the target of sin, those whose blood has been shed like the blood of Able, Jesus has demonstrated how much evil flows out of our anger. This is why Paul instructs us that if we do become angry that we are not to allow this anger to lead us to sin, to blind us to the glory of God within every person. No, if we are angry we must not let the sun go down on our anger so that we do not give evil a foothold in our life. If someone has angered us, it is important that we go and speak the truth of our hurt to the one who has hurt us, because the cross is where all of us our confronted by the truth of our sin. Yet, even so, the cross does not merely witness to the truth of our sin but it also, in the very next breath, offers us mercy, the same chance given to Cain. Mercy allows our life to overcome our sin so that we can go and offer love and life instead of hatred and death.
You see, many in the world may never know of Jesus and his cross but make no mistake, where ever we are at, people will know if we are carrying our cross. When we like Jesus unite ourselves with those who suffer at the hands of those who live by their desires, our actions will speak to the love of God. How strange this must be to those who live in the world by their desires because theirs is a life that is had by taking what they need by force. So they might wonder, if there is a God, shouldn’t his greatness also be found in his ability to take, so that through his power we might be able to take ever more for ourselves. After all, is not this a world of the haves and the have not’s? But just what is this message of the cross? If here is the very Son of God, then he is definitely one with the have-nots as he died as one who did not even have a grave to be buried in. Jesus is clearly shouting from the cross that life is found not by taking hold of as much as you can but rather life is found by giving everything you’ve got so that all might know of that they too are worthy of life and mercy. This is the life which Jesus has chosen us to represent, a life shaped by the cross, therefore as Jesus tells us, the world hates us. Jesus goes on to tell us that this hatred and persecution at the hands of the world is because that we have aligned ourselves with the God the world does not know. Now if we think about what Jesus tells us here we will figure out that the god the world knows and believes in is a god who demonstrates their power through the giving of material wealth and abundance to those he calls his own. This means that one’s circumstances will be an indicator of a person’s relationship with God. The richer and more well off we are will be considered a sign to those in the world that, yes, there is a god and he has dealt richly with us. So how difficult it must be to discover that, yes, there is a God in the world but this God refuses to be known through the circumstances of a person’s life. No, our God is known by the promises he makes with us. God is known by us whenever we seek to be righteous through our giving to those who are less fortunate than ourselves. Instead of not having enough for ourselves we find surprisingly enough we have more than enough and are quite satisfied. And we know that when we are merciful we can expect that we will receive mercy from God. So, this love of God, so true and perfect, throws out any fear we might have of judgment day. Likewise, when we keep our heart cleansed from the world’s influence and we refuse to desire the death of anyone, we can have the assurance that our God will one day honor us for our service to him. To the world, such promises are not at all what they are searching for. To them these promises of God have no impact on their search for their never satisfied appetites, their longing for what has caught their eye nor do these promises do anything to help their standing in their community. This makes their hatred of Jesus and our Heavenly Father more understandable yet as Jesus said, quoting sixty-ninth Psalm, the world hates him without any cause. What this means is that there is no good reason for anyone to hate God for God is their very creator, the one who sustains and saves their life. It just does not make any sense to hate the one who is the very source of our life and yet, even still, those in the world are angry at God for the God they want is not the God who is.
So, we praise Jesus for he has told us, in advance, that when we decide to take up our cross, following Christ in his death, joining him in serving the suffering of this world, and when we also join him in his life, this life of mercy, then the response of the world will be hatred. Again, I am surprised, that there are so many Christians who are shocked when people in the world treat them with contempt. Yet, as Jesus clearly teaches us, if they hated him then the world will hate those who follow him in carrying their cross. Now, despite all of this negativity, there is also a positive hope given to us when we face the wrath of the world. Jesus reminds us that we have been given the wondrous gift of the Holy Spirit, the very Spirit of truth. So we must wonder just what is this truth that the Spirit gives to us? The answer is that the Spirit gives to us the truth that we are indeed a beloved child of God. We have a Father who promises us that our obedience to him assures us that one day the whole world will be our inheritance. You see, those who are in the world try and take by force all they feel will give them the life they believe they deserve.But when we are a child of God, such a life the world takes by force is instead given to us by God in the life to come. You see, people in the world store up their worldly treasures to live a life here without a care only to find that all that they have accumulated in this life cannot be theirs in the world to come. This is what Jesus desperately wants the people of this world to understand. This is why in the sixth chapter of Luke, Jesus says, “Woe to those of you who are rich for you have received your consolation. Woe to you who are full now for you will be hungry. Woe to you who laugh now for you shall mourn and weep. And woe to you when all people speak well of you for so did your fathers speak well of the false prophets.” Jesus here speaks directly against living a life totally consumed with being just a consumer and we should be thankful for the warning. We should take what Jesus says to heart and consider if we are merely living to have the best life now, or if we are living for the life to come, the eternal life that is ours through obedience to our Heavenly Father. This good life is ours when we join in the sufferings of the least of these, when we offer mercy to all, and when we do everything so that God is honored above all else. This life to come is far too great of a gift for us to give up just so we can maintain the right to hate on someone. So let the world hate, their time is momentary. Our experience will be that we will be loved by our Heavenly Father for all eternity. God be praised!