I do not
remember ever having used the phrase “love the sinner, hate the sin” but I have
heard it occasionally and, more often, heard people objecting to it violently. The latter has always puzzled me. Every maxim
can of course be misused as a slogan to put down someone but the frequent response
to “love the sinner, hate the sin”
seemed to suggest that such advice is intrinsically
wrong. So I was interested to read Simon
Butler’s explanation of why this should be so.
Simon Butler
calls this “an old Evangelical nostrum” which is maybe the first surpise, given
the long history of the maxim from Augustine’s Cum dilectione hominum et odio vitiorum (With love for mankind and hatred of sins,
Letter 211) to Ghandi’s
“hate the sin and not the sinner” (in his autobiography The Story of My Experiments with Truth, page 439). Maybe Simon has encountered the
phrase on the lips of evangelicals only. He cites an unnamed former diocesan bishop
as saying to him “we must love the sinner but hate the sin, Simon. But never
forget that these people ... are sinners.” What strikes me as objectionable
here is the use of the phrase “these people” and with it the suggestion that “the
sinner” is someone else (only). But to my mind this falls in the category of
using the precept as a slogan against a particular group. The use is wrong, but
this does not necessarily entail that the maxim is mistaken.
Simon is entirely right to stress that we are all a mixture of good and
bad (the use of the phrase “saint and sinner” is arguably not helpful when explicitly
including unbelievers but I do not want a quibble about words detract from the
substantive point he wants to make).
The nub of the issue is this: Because we are all messed up, our identity
and our actions are so interwoven with each other that any attempt to separate
or even distinguish the two is doomed to failure. A related point is this:
Simon thinks it is in practice impossible to hate the sin without hating the person
committing it.
He adds to this concerns about spiritual superiority and hierarchy of
sinfulness which are legitimate concerns but concern a particular use of the
precept rather than the truthfulness or realism of the precept itself. After
all, one response to the former diocesan bishop might have been, “I really hate
what you’ve just said but I don’t hate you” (assuming for the moment that this
is indeed possible).
The penultimate paragraph teases out the substantial point. Simon
argues that it is impossible to “separate my sinfulness from my giftedness;
indeed, the former is in some way a consequence of the latter...Western,
juridical models of atonement, based as they are binary views of sin and
goodness, fail to acknowledge such a profound reality and, at some level,
prevent us from overcoming (befriending?) the fallen, shadow, sinful aspects of
ourselves.” I am not sure I fully understand this. To me “overcoming...sinful
aspects of ourselves” seems a very different thing from “befriending” them.
Might the popular East-West dualism help? Simon suggests, “A more
Eastern perspective – of sin as a disease or a divided heart – allows us to see
ourselves not as victims of an angry God, but as the beloved of a worried
Parent, who can be loved into to befriending and finding wholeness in the parts
of ourselves where sin can so easily master us.” Well, the Augustinian view of
sin as a defect, a lack of good, fits rather well with the disease imagery. I
can even imagine that you might want to befriend your disease rather than fight
it, especially if you have no hope of ever being healthy again, but I admit
that I still struggle to see why it should be intrinsically wrong to hate the
disease.
Ok, there are dangers lurking here. Our anger and hatred is rarely righteous.
Only God’s is. But still. Should we ask those who suffer from a long-term
debilitating illness, which has surely shaped them and also brought into
sharper relief some of their giftedness, to accept that the illness is part of
their identity and to love it, hoping that in the new heaven and the new earth
they might continue to be ill?
And does Simon want to sharply distinguish between his anthropology and
a sociology that works in parallel to it, or would he equally argue that we
cannot love contemporary British culture and society without loving the greed,
slavery and arrogance that, too, have made us what we are today?
If the only alternative to “love the sinner, hate the sin” is to abandon
binary views of sin and goodness and to stop distinguishing between good and evil,
I’d rather side with the old maxim. I know that it is in fact not easy to
distinguish between sin and sinner but in my experience the attempt to do so is
the way towards love. Those who refuse to make the distinction usually keep on refusing
to love the sinner because they hate the sin. This applies both to people’s
perception of themselves and of others. People hate themselves because they
hate some of the things they do. People distance themselves from others who say
and do things that are wrong. The refusal to distinguish between people and sin
does not in fact lead to an increase of love, as far as I can observe. This is
true for me personally as well. I find it easier to love someone if I refuse to
identify them with the aggression, arrogance or prejudice that drives a rift
between us.
I have not intention of starting to throw around this maxim in conversations but I think I still seek to live by it. Loving all people, hating all that is evil, and seeing every Christian as simul iustus et peccator.
See now also Ian Paul's blog post.
See now also Ian Paul's blog post.