This is not the first time I have written about something Christian apologist William Lane Craig gets wrong about logic, general metaphysics and epistemology, or Christian theology. In a clip posted to YouTube [1], he compares the Judeo-Christian God to Allah, the deity of Islam that is supposed to be the same God as that of Judeo-Christianity. Craig says that there is only a small handful of, as he calls them, "poetic" verses in Psalms saying God hates people, which he then says are outweighed by the verses affirming God's love for sinners. Moving on to Islam, he claims correctly that Allah is said to not love those who do not love him and do what is righteous. Yet Biblical theology is severely misrepresented here.
In Leviticus 20:23, God himself insists he hates the Canaanites for sins like the ones addressed in chapters 18 and 20. Is God engaging in poetic exaggeration, using language in a basically misleading manner to emphasize his displeasure? It would appear not. The words of Leviticus and any other part of the Bible never say or imply this, and there is no logical reason why God must or should not hate any person, no matter what they believe or do. Why would a rational, righteous being not deeply hate someone who neither cares for necessary truth and morality nor repents if they do err? Throughout Psalms (5:5-6, 11:5), Proverbs (3:31-32, 6:16-19, 11:20), and other places in the Old Testament (Deuteronomy 18:9-12, 22:5, 25:13-16, Hosea 9:15, Malachi 1:2-3), it is in fact reiterated that God hates some people. For the sake of conciseness, I need only to show a small selection from the many examples below. See the other verses listed in this paragraph for many more instances of this. Craig is very, very wrong when he asserts that there are "almost no passages in which it says that God hates sinners." He could only be assuming.
Leviticus 20:23—"'"You must not live according to the customs of the nations I am going to drive out before you. Because they did all these things, I abhorred them."'"
Deuteronomy 25:13-16—"Do not have two differing weights in your bag—one heavy, one light. Do not have two differing measures in your house—one large, one small. You must have accurate and honest weights and measures, so that you may live long in the land the Lord your God is giving you. For the Lord your God detests anyone who does these things, anyone who deals dishonestly."
Psalm 5:5-6—"The arrogant cannot stand in your presence. You hate all who do wrong; you destroy those who tell lies. The bloodthirsty and deceitful you, Lord, detest."
No matter how "literally" they claim to interpret the Bible, even if they really only mean this in some ultimately invalid way, a great many people in the broader American church would probably be horrified or puzzled if they stumbled upon these verses or similar ones. Yes, the New Testament does say with express clarity that God loves even currently unsaved sinners in a handful of key verses. However, it is likely that anyone who thinks Yahweh does not hate people almost certainly treats the New Testament as the starting point of the Bible (not the Old Testament which the New Testament must be consistent with in order to be true), hears/reads that God loves unsaved humanity, and then, if they ever encounter verses like Psalm 5:5 in the first place, ignores the logical fact that it is possible and perhaps even morally good to both hate and love someone at the same time. So they think God used to hate people but changed in the New Testament era or, as Craig asserts, any verse about God hating someone is merely poetic and not literal in its forcefulness. They allow discomfort with the Old Testament and their stubborn irrationality to keep them from seeing what is really very stark.
The verses which directly present God as loving Gentiles, not merely Jews, and even the wicked and those who have not committed to him are every bit as straightforward as those which say God hates certain people:
Deuteronomy 10:17-18—"For the Lord your God is God of gods and Lord of lords, the great God, mighty and awesome, who shows no partiality and accepts no bribes. He defends the cause of the fatherless and the widow, and loves the foreigner residing among you, giving them food and clothing."
John 3:16—"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life."
Romans 5:8—"But God shows his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us."
It is plain that Yahweh both hates and loves certain people, yet the explicit references to him hating unrepentant sinners are seemingly far more numerous than the statements that actually say with any directness that he loves the general unsaved. I have never seen this acknowledged by anyone else who did not fall into the error of either thinking that the Biblical God simply does not really hate anyone or that he hates some people without also loving them. The Bible rather obviously says both, though many do not seem to look in the right places or are quick to dismiss the logical compatibility of some types of love and hatred. This is not some particularly challenging issue on any level. Personal revulsion towards the idea of divine hatred, loyalty to church traditions rather than to reason and the Bible, and a misunderstanding of basic logical possibility are what actually deter people from accepting that, yes, Yahweh does hate people. While Craig does not necessarily deny in full that Yahweh hates at least some sinners to an extent, at best, he significantly trivializes it.
John 3:16 and Romans 5:8 do not deny that God hates at least some humans, and you could realize this while reading these verses in strict isolation from any other passage. But then again, neither does loving someone exclude the possibility of hating them at the same time. What the Bible says about divine hatred conflicts with neither pure reason nor with any other Biblical doctrine. Actually, the full nature of God's hatred is not even the only thing William Lane Craig has gotten severely wrong about verses like John 3:16. At least at one point, he affirmed the extremely illogical, heinous position that eternal torture in hell is justice, and that this is the position of the Bible (though the linked video does not address this). He probably still holds to this to this day. However, the verse clearly says that the alternative fate to eternal life is perishing, which is the only thing that logically could happen to someone who does not live forever: they would eventually cease to exist! The fact that God can still love people and still hate some of them fiercely is not the only major error he would hold to concerning John 3:16. And no matter what he might believe, say, or feel, eternal torture is by nature far worse than lacking love towards someone one way or another.
Craig has to neglect or reject almost every fact stated in this post to maintain ludicrous stances, even thinking that a wholly loving God would have anyone tortured without end! Somehow, allegedly, not loving sinners would be automatically evil or subpar, but torturing them forever is ethically legitimate, according to his incoherent nonsense. Verses from the Quran like Surah 3:140 do outright claim that God does not love evildoers. But, not loving someone is different from hating them. Furthermore, Yahweh's hatred is not some obscure triviality in Biblical theology. To make Christianity appear better than Islam, Craig misrepresents Christianity, when this is not even necessary to demonstrate that Allah's love is far more limited than Yahweh's either way. More than this, Craig just assumes that loving all people unconditionally is morally good in addition to some of his more grave but related beliefs that are not mentioned in the clip. As someone who thinks subjective conscience proves the existence of good and evil, as he states elsewhere, he is already standing on fallacious ground. Layers upon layers of errors constitute the majority of his worldview.
