Hate
Words of Encouragement
When the world hates you for following Jesus, remember they hated Him first. This hatred isn't personal rejection but positional opposition. You represent Kingdom values that threaten world systems, so expect hostility. But don't internalize it as personal failure.
The real tragedy isn't world hatred but believer-against-believer hatred. When God's children attack each other with venom over secondary issues, politics, or denominational differences, the enemy celebrates his successful infiltration strategy. Don't participate in this destruction.
Examine your church structures honestly. Have you adopted business models with CEO-style leadership that contradict Jesus' servant example? Are you fighting to become the Grand Poobah or washing feet like Jesus? Organizational drift happens gradually until structures barely resemble Kingdom family.
Politics has become an idol when partisan positions matter more than Kingdom unity. You can have political views without hating fellow believers who disagree. Don't let the enemy use political divisiveness to accomplish what world persecution couldn't - destroying church unity from within.
Check your love meter regularly. When you encounter hatred - whether from the world or sadly from fellow believers - how do you respond? Does your love level drop to match their hatred, or does it rise to reflect Jesus' character?
Jesus demonstrated ultimate love by allowing haters to persecute Him to death, then rising to prove love's invincible power. He didn't fight for position, demand rights, or retaliate against enemies. He served, loved, and died - then conquered death through resurrection.
Stop fighting to be right or become the Grand Poobah. Those battles reveal world values infiltrating your heart. Kingdom leadership serves, stoops, and elevates others - it doesn't compete for position or power.
Remember, you're chosen and taken out of the world to be His. This election explains world hatred but should never justify hatred toward fellow believers. Love your enemies, especially when they wear Christian labels.