V
Valke2
Guest
Why not. If all emotions are good, then hatred under the right circumstances is good.You may also want to quote the passage where Jesus flipped tables at the table for having turned the temple into a marketplace, but let me just point out that there is such a thing as justified anger, as all emotions are good, they are God given. But don’t let that anger turn into hate.
My opinion. But even so, I don’t agree with your itnerpetation of Jesus’ teaching.So it’s either your opinion or Jesus’ commandments. What will it be?
One definition of hatred, set forth in the Catholic encyclopdia:
… is that in which the intense dislike is concentrated primarily on the qualities or attributes of a person, and only secondarily, and as it were derivatively, upon the person himself.
Furthermore one may without sin go so far in the detestation of wrongdoing as to wish that which for its perpetrator is a very well-defined evil, yet under another aspect is a much more signal good. For instance, it would be lawful to pray for the death of a perniciously active heresiarch with a view to putting a stop to his ravages among the Christian people.
Still, even when the motive of one’s aversion is not impersonal, when, namely, it arises from the damage we may have sustained at the hands of others, we are not guilty of sin unless besides feeling indignation we yield to an aversion unwarranted by the by the hurt we have suffered.
In other words it is not a sin to hate in proportion to the damage the person has done. That being the case, there can really be no limit on the hatred I may have toward Bin Laden.