Why does the bible teach to love everyone but not to welcome the wicked?

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Everyone learns in Sunday School that you should love everyone, even your enemies. But in 2 John 7-11 it states not to welcome the wicked, but in the gospels Jesus talks to sinners in particular. Does anyone have an explanation for these seemingly contradictory teachings?
 
welcoming the wicked is like tempting ourselves…that means knowingly we are bringing up temptation…
 
Loving everybody does not mean we must condone or cooperate in their sins.
 
Because people are contagious. What other people allow into their lives affects you and your life.

Example: Fast-forwarding through a lot of drama, one of my tenants ended up abandoning the rent house in possession of her barely-18-yo son and going back home, about 2000 miles away. Normally, what I do is clear out stuff, get things cleaned and fixed, and re-rent. However, I felt bad for this kid, and let myself get involved in trying to give him a hand. His mom, it turned out, did meth. He himself had gotten into gangs in his old home, and had been in juvie for shoplifting and whatever else. I thought that I could help him rise over his upbringing, and be a nice, normal, stable person, leading a nice, normal, stable life, if only I gave him a chance to make something of himself.

But no matter how hard I worked with him, I couldn’t force him to be successful. I helped him get a job that paid $3k/mo (good for our area!)… but he couldn’t keep it more than a week. He went and got a part-time job at a local fast-food place… and he couldn’t keep it, either. He was more focused on certain drugs that were legal back home, and not legal here… and it got him in trouble. And then when he slept with a local drug dealer’s girlfriend… yeah, things exploded. I had never seen anyone genuinely in fear of his life before.

Giving these people a chance cost me plenty-- not just lost rent, but needles flushed down toilets (gotta replace the whole thing), condoms clogging up the sewer lines (gotta roto-root), angry drug dealers beating in the door (gotta replace the door and then the other door), angry people looking for stolen property (had no idea it was stolen! golly!), and whatever else. They couldn’t afford food for their stomachs, but they could afford pit bulls, and random stray cats (fleas! now I’m dealing with fleas!) and cigarettes (whole house re-paint!) and drugs.

My life would be so much simpler if I hadn’t decided to give her a chance to rise above her circumstances, and then compounded my bad decision by trying to give him a chance. I’m not just out half a year of lost rent; I’m out so much wear and tear from them trashing my house, and their friends and enemies trashing it, too.

I love 'em as human beings, even if I don’t embrace them as paragons of virtue. God created them to do something with their lives, and Jesus died to offer them salvation. But they’re so mired in that lifestyle, it would have been better for me to have not welcomed them in the first place. Now-- imagine that it wasn’t just limited to a business relationship. Imagine that it was a social relationship, and I hung out with them (just to be loving and neighborly!), and encouraged my kids to hang out with them, too. Tell me five good things you think would come out of that scenario. 🙂
 
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There’s a huge difference between welcoming the wicked and talking to sinners. Talking to sinners means trying to bring the light and truth of the Gospel to them. It doesn’t mean hanging out with them and letting them influence you.

Obviously, we are all sinners, so you need to keep in mind the difference between being a sinner and being wicked. For example, a person who cheats on their spouse but feels regret and tries to stay on the right path as opposed to the person who has multiple ongoing affairs, with their main concern being not getting caught.

And that’s not to say that you should shun people who are wicked, but keep some distance. I’m friends, but not overly close, with people who are proud, unrepentant sinners.
 
Also, if people have a Godly reputation and lead a righteous life-style, they will be a witness to God because of their lives. If they make ungodly people their close friends and companions, others, who may have been watching their righteous lifestyle and who may have been drawn to God because of it, may begin to think that, by the righteous person’s acceptance and friendship with the ungodly, they are in fact, condoning that lifestyle. The line between good and evil will begin to be blurred, and ultimately it may be believed that one’s lifestyle doesn’t really matter in God’s eyes either. IMHO
 
If you are leasing property, I think you have to act on business terms. A few people may respect your property, but it happens a lot that many tenants will not. And, you have to treat them all the same.
 
you have to pay the mortgage and taxes and upkeep on your property and thus you can’t let people take advantage of you. If you are handing out charity, that is one thing, but your tenants have to pay their bills just like you do.
 
In the bible, it also warns us to not throw pearls before swine and to shake the dust off our feet after certain encounters.
The proverbs often warn us about the company you keep.
Jesus Christ is not susceptible to peer pressure and his way of dealing with temptation is superior to ours.
When I think of wicked, I think of rapists, murderers, child molesters. I cannot imagine why the average person would associate with such people.
Do not be too naive. You must protect your own well-being as well.
Trust me, I’ve learned the hard there are toxic people.
 
Or people who could bring harm to yourself and your loved ones.
 
Everyone learns in Sunday School that you should love everyone, even your enemies.
Yes.
But in 2 John 7-11 it states not to welcome the wicked,
True.
Does anyone have an explanation for these seemingly contradictory teachings?

Sinners are not necessarily wicked. In essence, all of us are sinners. However, the Gospels do specify that Jesus spoke to prostitutes and tax collectors. As I understand it, these were people who had heeded His call to "repent! For the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand. (Matt 4:17).

But the wicked which St. John mentions are actually wolves in sheep clothing who are coming around teaching false doctrines. Let’s read it in context:

2 John 1:7 I say this because many deceivers, who do not acknowledge Jesus Christ as coming in the flesh, have gone out into the world. Any such person is the deceiver and the antichrist. 8 Watch out that you do not lose what we have worked for, but that you may be rewarded fully. 9 Anyone who runs ahead and does not continue in the teaching of Christ does not have God; whoever continues in the teaching has both the Father and the Son. 10 If anyone comes to you and does not bring this teaching, do not take them into your house or welcome them. 11 Anyone who welcomes them shares in their wicked work.

So, that’s almost a description of Jehovah Witnesses and Mormons. They do not believe that Jesus Christ is God and go around door to door trying to pass on their false doctrines. St. John instructs us not to welcome them or even to pray for them.

I hope that helps.
 
The context of the passage is ‘anti-Christ’…

For many deceivers are entered into the world, who confess not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh. This is a deceiver and an antichrist.
 
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