89. Hatred without Cause

No being was ever more lovely than the Saviour; it would seem almost impossible not to have affection for him. Certainly at first sight it would seem far more difficult to hate him than to love him.

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, June 29, 1856, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At New Park Street Chapel, Southwark.

They hated me without a cause. (John 15:25)

1. It is usually understood, that the quotation our Saviour here refers to is to be found in Ps 35:19, where David says, speaking of himself immediately and of the Saviour prophetically, “Do not let those who are my enemies rejoice over me, neither let them wink with the eye who hate me without a cause.” Our Saviour refers to that as being applicable to himself, and thus he really tells us, in effect, that many of the Psalms are Messianic, or refer to the Messiah; and, therefore, Dr. Hawker did not error, when he said he believed the Psalms referred to the Saviour, though he may have carried the truth too far. But it will be a good plan, in reading the Psalms, if we continually look at them as alluding not so much to David, as to the man of whom David was the type, Jesus Christ, David’s Lord.

2. No being was ever more lovely than the Saviour; it would seem almost impossible not to have affection for him. Certainly at first sight it would seem far more difficult to hate him than to love him. And yet, loveable as he was, yes, “altogether lovely,” no being was so quickly hated, and no creature ever endured such a continual persecution as he had to suffer. He is no sooner ushered into the world, than the sword of Herod is ready to cut him off, and the innocents of Bethlehem, by their dreadful massacre, gave a sad foretaste of the sufferings which Christ would endure, and of the hatred that men would pour upon his devoted head. From his first moment to the cross, except the temporary lull while he was a child, it seemed as if all the world was in league against him, and all men sought to destroy him. In different ways that hatred displayed itself, sometimes in overt deeds, as the time when they took him to the brow of the hill, and would have cast him down headlong, or when they took up stones again to stone him, because he said that Abraham desired to see his day, and saw it, and was glad. At other times that hatred showed itself in words of slander, such as these,—“He is a drunken man and a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners;” or in looks of contempt, as the time when they looked suspiciously at him, because he ate with publicans and sinners, and sat down to table with unwashed hands. At other times that hatred was entirely in their thoughts and they thought within themselves, “This man blasphemes,” because he said, “Your sins are forgiven.” But almost all the time there was a hatred towards Christ; and when they took him, and would have made him king, a shallow fleeting flood of popular applause would have wafted him on to an unsteady throne. Even then there was a latent hatred towards him, only kept under by loaves and fishes, which only lacked an equal quantity of loaves and fishes offered by the priests for a bribe, to develop it into the cry of “Crucify him, crucify him,” instead of the shout of “Hosanna! blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.” All classes of men hated him. Most men have to meet with some opposition; but then it is frequently a class opposition, and there are other classes who look at them with respect. The demagogue, who is admired by the poor, must expect to be despised by the rich; and he who labours for the aristocracy, of course meets with the contempt of the many. But here was a man who walked among the people, who loved them, who spoke to rich and poor as though they were (as indeed they are) on one level in his blessed sight: and yet all classes conspired to hate him. The priests decried him because he spoiled their dogmas; the nobles would have put him to death because he spoke of being a king; while the poor, for some reasons best known to themselves, though they admired his eloquence, and frequently would have fallen prostrate in worship before him on account of the wondrous deeds he did, even these, led by men who ought to given them better guidance, conspired to put him to death, and to consummate their guilt by nailing him to the tree, and then wagging their heads, bade him, if he could build a temple in three days, to save himself and come down from the cross. Christ was the hated one, the slandered and scorned; he was “despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief.”

3. Now, we shall try this morning, first, to justify the Saviour’s remarks, that he was hated without a cause; and secondly, to dwell upon the sin of men—that men hated him without a cause; in the third place, to give a lesson or two to Christ’s own people, which they may well learn from the fact, that their Saviour was hated without a cause.

4. I. First, then, beloved, let us JUSTIFY WHAT THE SAVIOUR SAID,—“They hated me without a cause.” And we remark, that, apart from the consideration of man’s sinfulness, and Christ’s purity, there certainly is no cause whatever, to be found why the world should have hated him.

5. First let us regard Christ in his person. Was there anything in Christ’s person as a man, when he lived in this world, which had a natural tendency to make any person hate him? Let us remark, that there was an absence of almost everything which excites hatred between man and man. In the first place there was no great rank in Christ to excite envy. It is a well known fact that let a man be ever so good, if he is at all lifted above his fellow creatures by riches, or by title, though individually men will respect him, yet the many often speak against him, not so much for what he is, as for his rank and his title. It seems to be natural to men in the mass to despise nobles; each man, individually, thinks it a wonderfully good thing to know a lord; but put men together, and they will despise lords and bishops and speak very lightly of principalities and powers. Now Christ had none of the outward circumstances of rank, he had no chariot, no expensive robes, no elevation above his fellows; when he walked abroad there were no heralds to attend him, there was no pomp to honour him. In fact, one would think that Christ’s appearance would naturally have engendered pity. Instead of being lifted above men, he did, in some sense, seem to be below them, for foxes had holes, and the birds of the air had nests, but the Son of Man had nowhere to lay his head. Many a democrat has railed against the archbishop when he has gone by Lambeth palace; but would he curse or despise him if he were told the archbishop had nowhere to lay his head, but simply toiled for the truth’s sake, and had no reward? The envy naturally excited by rank, station, and such like, could not have operated in Christ’s case; there was nothing in his garb to attract attention; it was the garb of the peasant of Galilee—“of one piece, woven from the top throughout.” Nor was there anything in his rank. He might have been the son of an ancient royal family, but its royalty was apparently extinct, and he was only known as the son of the carpenter. They hated him, then, in that sense, “without a cause.”

6. Many people seem to have envy excited in them against those who exercise rule or government over them. The very fact of a man having authority over me stirs up my evil passions, and I begin to look at him with suspicion, because he is invested with that authority. Some men naturally fall into the groove, and obey simply because the rule is made; principalities and powers are established, and they submit themselves for the Lord’s sake; but the many, especially in these republican times, seem to have a natural tendency to kick against authority, simply because it is authority. But if authorities and governments were changed every month, I believe that in some countries, in France for instance, there would be revolutions as much under one government as under another; in fact, they hate all government there, and wish to be without law, that each man may do what is right in his own eyes. But this did not operate in Christ’s case, he was not a king; he did not assume sway over the multitude. It is true he was Lord over tempests and seas; it is true he could command demons, and, if he pleased, men must have been his obedient servants; but he did not assume power over them. He marshalled no armies, he promulgated no laws, he did not make himself great in the land; the people did just as they liked, for all the authority he exercised over them. In fact, instead of placing laws upon them which were severe, he seemed to have loosened the rigidity of their system; for when the adulterous woman, who, otherwise, would have been put to death, was brought before him, he said, “Neither do I condemn you.” And he relaxed, to a certain extent, the rigidity of the Sabbatical ordinance, which was in some respects too burdensome, saying, “The Sabbath was made for man.” Surely, then, they hated him “without a cause.”

7. Some men make others dislike them because they are proud. I know some men that I should have liked very well if the starch had been left out of them; I should really sympathise with them and admire them if they had the least degree of condescension, but they seem to walk about the world with such an attitude of pride! They may not be proud—very likely they are not; but, as an old divine said, “When we see a fox’s tail sticking out of a hole, we naturally expect the fox is there.” And, somehow or other, the human mind cannot bear pride; we always kick against it. But there was nothing of that in our Saviour. How humble he was! Why he stooped to anything. He would wash his disciples’ feet; and when he walked about among men, there was no pretension about him, as if he would say to them, “See my talent, see my power, see my rank, see my dignity, stand by, I am greater than you.” No, he takes his seat there. There is Matthew, the publican, sitting beside him, and he does not think he is degraded by the publican, although he is the worst of sinners; and there is a harlot, he speaks to her; there is another with seven devils, and he casts the devils out of her, and another, who has leprosy and he even touches the leper, to show how humble he was, and that there was nothing of pride about him. Oh! could you have seen the Saviour, he was the very paragon of humility! There were none of your forms of etiquette and politeness about him, he had that true politeness which makes itself affable to all men, because it is kind and loving to all. There was no pride in the Saviour and consequently there was nothing to excite men’s anger on that account. Therefore, they hated him “without a cause.”

8. There are others that you cannot help disliking, because they are so snappish, and waspish, and angry; they look as if they were born on some terribly dark stormy day, and as if, in the mixture of their body, no small quantity of vinegar was used. You could not sit long with them, without feeling that you have to keep your tongue in pretty tight chain; you must not talk freely, or there would be a quarrel, for they would make you an offender for a word. You may say, “Such an individual is, no doubt a good man; but really, that temper of his I cannot bear it.” And when a man stands prominently before the public, with a nasty sour disposition, one feels inclined to dislike him. But there was nothing of this about our Saviour. “When he was reviled, he did not revile again;” if men spat in his face he said nothing to them; and when they stuck him, he did not curse them; he sat still and bore their scorn. He walked through the world, with contempt and infamy constantly poured upon him; but “he did not answer a word;” he was never angry. You cannot find, in reading the Saviour’s life, that he spoke one angry word, except those words of holy wrath which he poured, like scalding oil, upon the head of Pharisaic pride; then, indeed, his wrath did boil, but it was holy wrath. With such a loving, kind, gentle spirit, one would have thought that he would have gone through the world as easily as possible. His kind spirit seemed to make a straight road for his feet. But, notwithstanding all that, they hated him. Truly, we can say, “they hated him without a cause.”

9. There is another set of people you can scarcely help disliking; they are selfish people. Now, we know some people who are very even tempered, who are extremely honest and upright, but they are so selfish! When you are with them, you feel that they are just friends to you for what they can get out of you; and when you have served their purpose, they will just lay you aside, and endeavour to find another. In trying to do good, their good deed has an ulterior motive, but, somehow or other, they are always found out; and no man in the world gets a greater share of public ignominy than the man who lives a selfish life. Among the most miserable men in the universe, kicked about the world like a football, is the selfish miser. But in Christ there was nothing selfish; whatever he did, he did for others. He had a marvellous power of working miracles, but he would not even change a stone into bread for himself; he reserved his miraculous power for others; he did not seem to have a particle of self in his whole nature. In fact, the description of his life might be written very briefly: “he saved others, himself he did not save.” He walked about; he touched the poorest, the lowliest, and those who were the most sick; he did not care what men might say of him; he seemed to have no regard for fame, or dignity, or ease, or honour. Neither his bodily nor his mental comforts were in the least regarded by him. Self-sacrifice was the life of Christ; but he did it with such an ease that it seemed no sacrifice. Ah! beloved, in that sense certainly they hated Christ without a cause; for there was nothing in Christ to excite their hatred—in fact, there was everything, on the other hand, to bind the whole world to love and reverence a character so eminently unselfish.

10. Another kind of person that I do not like is the hypocritical man; no, I think I could even live with the selfish man, if I knew him to be selfish; but the hypocrite, do not let him come anywhere near where I am. Let a public official be a hypocrite once, and the world will scarcely trust him again; they will hate him. But Christ was, in this particular, free from any blame; and if they hated him, they did not hate him for that, for there never was a more unvarnished man than Christ. He was called, you know, the child Jesus; because as a child speaks freely, and has no reserve, and no craftiness, even so it was with Jesus; he had no affectation, no deceit. There was no change about him; he was “without variableness or shadow of turning.” Whatever the world may say of Christ, they never said they believed he was a hypocrite; and among all the slanders they brought against him, they never disputed his sincerity. Had they been able to show that he really had been imposing upon them, they might have had some grounds for hating him; but he lived in the sunlight of sincerity and walked on the very mountain top of continual observation. He could not be a hypocrite, and men knew he could not; and yet men hated him. Truly, my friends, if you survey the character of Christ, in all its loveliness, in all its benevolence, in all its sincerity, in all its self-devotion, in all its intense eagerness to benefit man, you must say, indeed, “they hated him without a cause.” There was nothing in Christ’s person to induce men to hate him.

11. In the next place, was there anything in Christ’s errand which could make people hate him? If they had asked him, for what reason have you come from heaven? would there have been anything in his answer likely to excite their indignation and hatred? I do not think so. For what purpose did he come? He came, first of all, to explain mysteries—to tell them what was meant by the sacrificial lamb, what was the significance of the scape goat, what was intended by the ark, the brazen serpent, and the pot of manna; he came to rend the veil of the holy of holies, and to show men secrets they had never seen before. Should they have hated one who lifted the veil of mystery, and made dark things light, and expounded riddles? Should they have hated him who taught them what Abraham desired to see, and what prophets and kings had longed to know, but died without a knowledge of? Was there anything in that to make them hate him? What else did he come for? He came on earth to reclaim the wanderer; and is there anything in that that should make men hate Christ? If he came to reform the drunkard, to reclaim the harlot, and gather in the publicans and sinners, and bring prodigals to their father’s house again, surely that is an object with which every philanthropist would agree; it is that for which our governments are formed and fashioned, to bring men to a better state; and if Christ came for that purpose, was there anything in that to make men hate him? For what else did he come? He came to heal the diseases of the body; is that a legitimate object of hatred? Shall I hate the physician who goes about gratuitously healing all kinds of diseases? Are deaf ears unstopped, are mouths opened, are the dead raised, are the blind made to see, and widows blest with their sons? Are these causes why a man should be obnoxious? Surely, he might well say, “For which of these works do you stone me? If I have done good works why do you speak against me?” But none of these works were the cause of men’s hatred; they hated him without a cause. And he came on earth to die, that sinners might not die? Was that a cause of hatred? Should I hate the Saviour, because he came to quench the flames of hell for me? Should I despise him who allowed his Father’s flaming sword to be quenched in his own vital blood? Shall I look with indignation upon the substitute who takes my sins and griefs upon him, and carries my sorrows? Shall I hate and despise the man who loved me better than he loved himself—who loved me so much that he visited the gloomy grave for my salvation? Are these the causes of hatred? Surely his errand was one that ought to have made us sing his praise for ever, and join the harps of angels in their rapturous songs. “They hated me without a cause.”

12. But once more: was there anything in Christ’s doctrine that should have made us hate him? No, we answer; there was nothing in his doctrine that should have excited men’s hatred. Take his preceptive doctrines. Did he not teach us to do to others as we have them do to us? Was he not also the exponent of everything lovely and honourable, and of good repute? And was not his teaching the very essence of virtue, so that if virtue itself had written it, it could not have written such a perfect code of lovely morals, and excellent virtues. Was it the ethical part of his doctrines that men hated? He taught that rich and poor must stand on one level; he taught that his gospel was not to be confined to one particular nation, but was to be gloriously expansive so as to cover the world! This perhaps, was one principal reason for their hating him; but surely there was no justifiable cause for their indignation in this. There was nothing in Christ to lead men to hate him. “They hated him without a cause.”

13. II. And now, in the second place, I come to dwell on MAN’S SIN, that he should have hated the Saviour without a cause. Ah! beloved, I will not tell you of man’s adulteries, and fornications, and murders, and poisonings, and sodomies. I will not tell you of man’s wars, and bloodsheds, and cruelties, and rebellions. If I want to tell you man’s sin, I must tell you that man is a deicide—that he put to death his God, and murdered his Saviour; and when I have told you that, I have given you the essence of all sin, the masterpiece of crime, the very pinnacle and climax of the terrific pyramid of mortal guilt. Man outdid himself when he put his Saviour to death, and sin did out-Herod when it murdered the Lord of the universe, the lover of the race of man, who came on earth to die. Never does sin appear so exceedingly sinful as when we see it directed at the person of Christ, whom it hated without a cause. In every other case, when man has hated goodness, there have always been some extenuating circumstances. We never do see goodness in this world without alloy; however great may be any man’s goodness, there is always some peg whereon we may hang a censure; however excellent a man may be, there is always some fault which may diminish our admiration or our love. But in the Saviour there was nothing of this. There was nothing that could mar the picture; holiness stood out to the very life; there was holiness—only holiness. Let a man hate Whitfield, one of the holiest men that ever lived, he would tell you, he did not hate his goodness, but he hated his ranting preaching, and the extraordinary anecdotes he told; or he would pull out something that dropped from his lips, and hold it up to derision. But in Christ’s case men could not do that; for though they sought for false witnesses, yet their witnesses did not agree together. There was nothing in him but holiness: and any person with half an eye can see, that the thing men hated was simply that Christ was perfect; they could not have hated him for anything else. And thus you see the abominable, detestable evil of the human heart—that man hates goodness simply because it is such. It is not true that we Christian people are hated because of our infirmities; men make our infirmities a nail whereon to hang their laughter; but if we were not Christians they would not hate our infirmities. They hold our inconsistencies up to ridicule; but I do not believe our inconsistencies are what they care about; we might be as inconsistent as all the rest of the world if we did not profess religion, or if they did not think we had any. But because the Saviour had no inconsistencies or infirmities, men were stripped of all their excuses for hating him, and it came out that man naturally hates goodness, because he is so evil that he cannot only detest it.

14. And now let me appeal to every sinner present, and ask him whether he ever had any cause for hating Christ. But someone says, “I do not hate him; if he were to come to my house I would love him very much.” But it is very remarkable that Christ lives next door to you, in the person of poor Betty there. She goes to such-and-such a chapel, and you say she is nothing but a poor canting Methodist. Why do you not like Betty? She is one of Christ’s members, and “Inasmuch as you have done it to one of the least of these, you have done it to me.” You say you do not hate Christ. Now, look across the chapel. Do you not know a man, a member of this place, a very holy man, but somehow or other you cannot bear him, because he told you about your faults once. Ah! sir, if you loved Christ you would love his members. What! tell me you love my head, but you do not love my hands? My dear fellow, you cannot cut my head off and let me be the same person. If you love Christ the head, you must love his members. But you say, “I do love his people.” Very well, then you have passed from death to life, if you love the brethren. But you say, “I am not sure that I am a changed character, still, I am not aware that there is any opposition in my heart to Christ and his gospel.” You may not be aware of it, but it is your not being aware of it that makes your case all the more sad. Perhaps if you knew it, and wept over it, you would come to Christ; but, since you do not know it and do not feel it, that is a proof of your hostility. Now, come! I must suppose you to be hostile to Christ, unless you love him; for I know there are only two opinions of him. You must either hate him or love him. As for indifference with regard to Christ, it is just a clear impossibility. A man might as well say, “I am indifferent towards honesty.” Why, then he is dishonest, is he not? You are indifferent to Christ? Then you hate him. And why is it that you hate him? Many a time you have been wooed by the gospel; you have resisted appeals, many of them; come, now, for which of Christ’s works do you hate him? Have I a persecutor here? Sinner! for what do you hate Christ? Do you curse him? Tell me what he has done, that you should be angry with him. Point to a single fault of his in his behaviour towards you. Has Christ ever hurt you? “Oh!” one says, “he has taken my wife and made her one of his children and she has been baptized and comes to chapel, and I cannot bear that.” Ah! sinner, is that why you hate Christ? Would you have hated Christ if he had snatched your wife from the flames, if he had saved her from going down to death. No, you would love him. And he has saved your wife’s soul. Ah! if he never saves you; if you love your wife, you will have enough cause to love him, to think he has been so good to you. I tell you, if you hate Christ, you not only hate him without a cause, but you hate him when you have ample cause to love him. Come, poor sinner, what have you profited by hating Christ? You have stings of conscience. Many a sinner, by hating Christ, has been locked up in jail, has a ragged coat, a diseased body, a nasty filthy house, with broken windows, a poor wife, nearly beaten to death, and children that scamper out of the way as soon as father comes home. What have you benefitted by hating Christ? Oh! if you was to estimate your gains, you would find that getting Christ would be a gain, but that hating him is a dead loss to you. Now, if you hate Christ and Christ’s religion, I tell you that you hate Christ without a cause; and let me give you one solemn warning, which is this, that if you keep on hating Christ until you die, you will not hurt Christ by it, but you will hurt yourself most dreadfully. Oh! may God deliver you from being haters of Christ! There is nothing to be gain by it, but everything to lose by it. For what cause do you hate Christ, sinner? For what cause do you hate Christ, persecutor? For what cause do you hate Christ, you carnal, ungodly men? What do you hate Christ’s gospel for? His ministers—what harm have they done to you? What harm can they do to you, when they long to do you all the good in the world? Why is it you hate Christ? Ah! it is only because you are so desperately set on mischief—because the poison of asps is under your lips, and your throat is an open sepulchre. Otherwise, you would love Christ. They hated him “without a cause.”

15. And now, Christian men, I must preach to you for just a moment. Surely you have great reason to love Christ now, for you once hated him without a cause. Did you ever treat a friend poorly, and did not know it? It has been the misfortune of most of us to do it sometimes. We had some suspicion that a friend had done us an injury; we quarrelled with him for weeks, and he had not done it at all. What he had done was only to warn us. Ah! there are never tears like those we shed when we have injured a friend. And should we not weep when we have injured the Saviour? Did he not come to my door one cold damp night, and I shut my door against him? Oh! I have done what I cannot undo; I have slighted my Lord, I have insulted my friend, I have thrown dishonours upon him whom I admire. Shall I not weep for him? Oh! shall I not spend my very life for him? for my sins, my own treachery spilled his blood. Monuments, ah! monuments I will build; wherever I live, wherever I go, I will pile up monuments of praise, that his name may be spread; and wherever I wander, I will tell what he did, with many a tear, that for so long I have poorly treated him and so fearfully misunderstood him. We hated him without a cause; therefore, let us love him.

16. III. Two LESSONS TO THE SAINTS.

17. In the first place, if your Master was hated without a cause, do not expect to get by very easily in the world. If your Master was subject to all this contempt and all this pain, do you suppose you will always ride through this world in a chariot? If you do, you will be marvellously mistaken. As your Master was persecuted, you must expect the same. Some of you pity us when we are persecuted and despised. Ah! save your pity, keep it for those of whom the world speaks well; keep it for those against whom the woe is pronounced. “Woe to you when all men shall speak well of you.” Save your pity for earth’s favourites; save your pity for this world’s lords, who are applauded by all men. We do not ask for your pity; no, sirs, in all these things we rejoice, and “glory in tribulations also, knowing that the things which happen to us, happen for the furtherance of the gospel;” and we count it all joy when we fall into many temptations, for we rejoice that thus the name of Christ is known and his kingdom extended.

18. The other lesson is, take care, if the world does hate you, that it hates you without a cause. If the world is going to oppose you, it is of no use encouraging the world oppose you. This world is bitter enough, without my putting vinegar in it. Some people seem to fancy the world will persecute them; therefore, they put themselves into a fighting posture, as if they invited persecutions. Now, I do not see any good in doing that. Do not try and make other people dislike you. Really, the opposition some people meet with is not for the sake of righteousness, but for their own sin’s sake, or their own nasty temper’s sake. Many a Christian lives in a house—a Christian servant girl perhaps; she says she is persecuted for the sake of righteousness. But she has a bad disposition; she sometimes speaks sharply, and then her mistress reproves her. That is not being persecuted for the sake of righteousness. There is another, a merchant in the city, perhaps; he is not looked upon with much esteem. He says he is persecuted for the sake of righteousness; however, it is because he did not keep a bargain sometime ago. Another man says he is persecuted for the sake of righteousness; but he goes about assuming authority over everyone, and now and then people turn around and upbraid him. Look to it, Christian people, that if you are persecuted, it is for the sake of righteousness; for if you get any persecution yourself you must keep it to yourself. The persecutions you bring on yourself for your own sins, Christ has nothing to do with them; they are chastisements on you. They hated Christ without a cause; then do not fear to be hated. They hated Christ without a cause; then do not try to be hated, and give the world no reason for it.

19. And now may you who hate Christ love him; Oh! that he would bring himself to you now! Oh! that he would show himself to you! And then surely you must love him at once. He who believes on the Lord Jesus will be sure to love him and he who loves him shall be saved. Oh! that God would give you faith, and give you love, for Christ Jesus’ sake! Amen.

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These sermons from Charles Spurgeon are a series that is for reference and not necessarily a position of Answers in Genesis. Spurgeon did not entirely agree with six days of creation and dives into subjects that are beyond the AiG focus (e.g., Calvinism vs. Arminianism, modes of baptism, and so on).

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