Last Sundayโs gospel gives us Johnโs version of Jesus โgoing Brooklynโ on the moneychangers in the temple, a story that has often been used by Christians to justify anger (usually described as โrighteousโ). Several months ago, I wondered in this blog whether I might also use it to justify my hatred for Donald Trump. I find that hatred still simmering below the surface, and Iโm still wondering if that makes me a bad Christian . . .
Flannery OโConnor once wrote that โthe human being is always something under construction.โ I am frequently reminded of just how true this is, even for someone who has been under construction for more than six decades. My most recent reminder happened two days ago.
As I watched the fifth episode of Ken Burnsโ documentary โThe Vietnam Warโ on PBS, I was also scrolling down my Facebook wall to see if there was anything interesting there (I donโt mind multitasking on occasion). A friend had posted a picture of a highway billboard that was just too good not to share on my own page:
I limited my commentary on the picture to three words: โGot that right.โ And the likes, emoticons, and comments started pouring in.
Some welcomed the opportunity to pile on:
- Weโre all allowed to hate privileged, moronic bigots.
- I rarely hate, but I hate Donald Trump. If he was just pathetic that would be one thing, but heโs exploiting everything and everybody, destroying every characteristic of sound government and humanity. I refuse to believe heโs just being manipulated.
Others gently chided me for being judgmental and unkind, as in the following exchange with a former colleague at the college:
- Him: โHateโ is an interesting word. One may be odious without being hated. The hater reveals more of her/himself than of the hated. There are many โpatheticโ people though one wonders why they might be โhatedโ as opposed to being sympathized with.
- Me: Iโm not proud of being a hater when it comes to Trump. But I am one. I bothers me because he is perhaps the first person Iโve said that about since Ronald Reagan when I was much younger and stupider.
- Him: My greatest culture hero, Jonathan Swift, an Anglican Dean, was a great hater, but he hardly picked on the pathetic.
- Me: Saying I hate Trump is hardly picking on him. Nor is his being pathetic a reason to pity him when he occupies the most powerful position in the world.
Donโt get me wrongโI aware that it is politically incorrect for liberal, progressive, peace-loving, tree-hugging folks such as I to admit to hating anyoneโas another friend lightheartedly reminded me:
- Him: You should not hate anyone! I am appalled!!
- Me: Iโm a human beingโso sue me!
- Him: No need to sue you, I have plenty of money, and besides I still love you and your family!
Then, of course, thereโs always the killjoy who just has to play the Christian card (I hate it when someone does that).
- Her: Frankly, thatโs just plain wrong. As Christians, weโre not supposed to hate anyone, but to love and pray for everyone, even our worst enemies. Seriously, people have forgiven people personally murdering their family or torturing them; Christ forgive his own killers on the cross. I do think as Christians we can learn to see Christ in the likes of Donald Trump. Otherwise, weโre failing miserably. And no, it doesnโt have to do with politics. I did not vote for the man, but I do pray for him and recognize our shared humanity.
- Me: Congratulations on being a better Christian than I am.
My snarky response aside, I knew this one was coming. I take my faith seriously and am fully aware that coming out as a โhaterโโeven of someone like Donald Trumpโโoutsโ me as a hypocrite, a weak Christian, or both. Guilty as charged.
- Her: I donโt think itโs a matter of being โbetterโ; itโs just a process we all should be striving towards in our imitation of Christ. I know people who alternately act the same way about Hillary Clinton and those on her side of the political fence . . . Our faith is supposed to be stronger than our politics in such matters. We are supposed to love unconditionally, especially those who we naturally find repugnant or distasteful. If we canโt do it with politicians (and mind, I personally donโt like either Trump or Clinton), how will we ever handle people who seriously hurt us or those we love on a personal level? Even if we donโt feel it, it can be a movement of the will to embrace something higher than ourselves.
- Me: I do strive for it and am very aware of the challenges of living out my faith rather than just talking or writing about it. My faith is โsupposed to be strongerโ in such mattersโI agree. Iโm also willing to be honest about my regular failure to live up to that, as well as about the times I think Iโve lived it out well for a day.
- Her: Thatโs well and good, but the sign above can come off as something of a โpositiveโ statement, to make Trump seem like the sole โunlovableโ dehumanized being, and getting people to sympathize with that. In that way, itโs toxic.
- Me: Give me a break. Iโm really not particularly interested in twisting something that is pretty clear in its meaningโwhether or not you happen to agree with itโinto its complete opposite. Have a good one.
Mercifully, she didnโt respond, my suggestion that she is a better Christian than I am having been completely confirmed.
My primary reason for sharing the picture of the billboard was that I thought it was funny (and still do). But the subsequent exchanges do raise an important questionโwhy am I a hater when it comes to Donald Trump? Why am I willing to admit it in public and double-down on it when someone points out that being a hater is incompatible with many of the most important things I believe? A couple of strategies come to mind.
I could take the sanctimonious route that I learned as a kid and say โwhat I really mean is that I hate the sin but love the sinner.โ Itโs not so much Donald that I hate, in other words, as the things he does and stands for. But that strategy is a cop-out. Paul Ryan, Mitch McConnell, John Boehner, and any number of others have stood for and do stand for things that I hate, but I donโt hate the person. In Donaldโs case, it seems personal. Even when he accidentally does something I agree withโlike siding with the Democrats once or twiceโI still hate him. In his case, I hate both the sin and the sinner.
Or I could take a different sanctimonious route and say that this isnโt โhateโโitโs โrighteous indignation.โ Thatโs how we used to get Jesus off the hook for losing it in the temple and throwing the moneychangers out. Certainly Jesus didnโt โhateโ themโor did he? Actually, Jesus is reported to have said some pretty hateful things about a number of people, many of whom Iโm sure were just doing their jobs and what they were convinced was the right thing. Anyways, what I feel concerning Donald Trump doesnโt strike me as โrighteous indignation.โ It strikes me as hate. And to make it even worse, I donโt feel a shred of guilt about it.
Those who know me well and/or read this blog regularly know that I am not a hater by nature. Thatโs how I know that this is truly hatredโI experience the feeling so seldom that there is no mistaking it when it shows up. Thereโs no other way to explain my rising blood pressure and the pain deep in my gut every time I hear or see him on television or radio. I donโt like carrying hatred around. Hating someone is exhaustingโit wastes psychological and emotional resources that are better used elsewhere.
So I could try to be a better Christian, as my Facebook conversation partner suggests. I should love and forgive everybodyโthatโs what Jesus did. โChrist forgive his own killers on the cross,โ I was reminded in that conversation.
The problem is, Iโm not Jesus. Iโm me. Iโm a flawed, imperfect human being who is committed to trying to live according to principles that are impossible to live by. As I talked about this and more with Jeanne (who also hates Donald Trump) at lunch today, she reminded me of something that I occasionally almost forget in my forays into more and more progressive and liberal Christianityโno one can live according to the principles and requirements of the Gospels. No one can live the Christian life. Itโs impossible.
The good news is that the whole point of the Christian faith, of following Jesus, is that it canโt be done by simply trying hard, even with the best of intentions. Call it what you willโhuman nature, original sin, natural weaknessโbut we all need help. And help is availableโthatโs the good news, the gospel, that Jesus delivered on a regular basis and that is still operative now. I am indeed something under construction, and sometimes what needs fixing or improvement has to be handed over to someone with both intimate knowledge of what itโs like to be human and the tools to keep working on daily imperfections. My hatred of Donald Trump happens to be a particularly stubborn exampleโand until someone does something about it, Iโm okay with that.