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Hitting The Hate Button Series
Contributed by Chuck Gohn on Jul 27, 2022 (message contributor)
Summary: This sermon focuses on the hatred that the world had for Jesus as a result of the evil that it produces, and the applications for Christians today.
Good morning. I have a very easy opening question for you. How many of you out there like to be liked? Good response. I think we all like to be liked. I am someone who really likes to be liked and that is one more reason that I like Facebook. That is one of the reasons I am on Facebook because Facebook has all these opportunities to be liked. To be able to put quotes down or pictures and have people like you. It is really a neat thing. Rather than me try to explain it to you, I thought what I would do is have my own daughter, Kristin, and somewhat of a Facebook expert come up and explain some of this to us. Please give her a warm welcome. So, Kristin, werenāt you one of the first people to introduce me to Facebook. āYes, I got you on Facebook.ā I resisted it a while. You have been on it for a number of years. āA little over four years.ā I would say she is an expert at this. Tell me about this āLikeā button. What is this āLikeā button all about? āTo sum it up, the āLikeā button is a clickable link on Facebook that says the word āLikeā.ā Simple enough. Does everybody get that? There is a button you click called āLikeā. Now why would I use such a button? Can you give me an example of how I might use it? āIf someone posts a picture from a recent vacation and you like this picture because it is fun, neat, or nice but you donāt want to write a whole comment about it, you would just go and click the āLikeā button and it would say Chuck Gohn Likes this with a little thumbs up next to it.ā That is nice. Give me some other way that you might use it besides pictures. āIf someone writes a comment or maybe a status update and you also like that you would click the āLikeā button. For example, when Brad and I got engaged, we announced it on Facebook and people were āLike, Like, Likeā. You liked it didnāt you?ā I initially didnāt like it but once I got used to the idea, I kind of liked it. But then again no man is good enough for either of my daughters. What if for some reason I didnāt like it? Is there is a dislike button? āNo. There is no dislike button. It is a āLikeā button. There is only one button and it says āLikeā. You can only like things on Facebook.ā I donāt like to have to click it. What if I donāt click it? What happens? āNothing happens. You donāt like it. There is one button that says āLikeā. If you donāt click it, then people either assume that you didnāt see what they put or maybe you didnāt like it.ā Then they might get a little angry and think I donāt like them. āNo. It is a āLikeā button. They just think maybe you didnāt see it. There is one button that says āLikeā. You either push it or you donāt push it.ā Letās say that I really didnāt like it. I actually hated the comment. Can I click on a āHateā button? āHate? No. There is not a āDislikeā button so there is not going to be a āHateā button. There is no āHateā button on Facebook. There is a āLikeā button.ā You have been on Facebook for four years, so I think she is probably one of the early Facebook people. She probably has some connections with Mark Zuckerberg. Would you please make sure I get my āHateā button? āNo one wants you to have a āHateā button. You go on Facebook so that people will like you and so that you can like things, and if you start hating everything people wonāt like you very much, kind of like I donāt like you very much right now.ā Aw, Kristin. I guess what you are saying is I should quit while I am ahead. āYes. Kristin E āLikesā this.ā Ok. Thank you.
Although there is not a āHateā button, I suspect that if Jesus were on Facebook today, he would need a āHateā button because as we find out in todayās reading, more people hated Jesus than actually liked Jesus. If you have your Bibles today, please open up to John 7:1. We have been looking at the book of John. Most recently, we went through chapter 6. You may recall in chapter 6 we had the story of the feeding of the 5,000. We had the story of Jesus walking on water. We had the story of the Bread of Life discourse. We are proceeding on past chapter 6 and going into chapter 7 where Jesus is beginning to encounter a lot of conflict. As we see in the opening part, we see that Jesus decided to travel a little bit more around the area of Galilee between the Sea of Galilee before going up to Judea. It is not that he was afraid. It is just that he knew there were Jews there that wanted to take his life. There were people there that tactually wanted to kill him. He knew that the time was not right. Yet he had some biological brothers who tried to encourage Jesus to go up into Jerusalem because there was a big feast coming. It was called the Feast of the Tabernacle. It was also known as the Feast of the Tents or Feast of the Booths. It is actually a period of time for seven or eight days where the Jews would set up tents and booths within Jerusalem and sleep and eat there for seven to eight days. Actually, this was one of the three required festivals of the Jews for Jewish men to attend. Passover, Pentecost, and the Feast of Tents. They were encouraging Jesus to go up there because it is a great opportunity to make yourself known to the people and to the public because there were people traveling from all over the world. Jesus, in his own gentle way, lets them know that he doesnāt necessarily agree with that idea. We are going to be reading from John 7:1. (Scripture read here.)