No, that would be dualism and it's heretical. Christians are not freemasons and we don't engage in dialectics (black and white checkerboard; two sides of the same coin; God and Satan being evenly matched and in an eternal battle over the world).
Love doesn't necessitate hate. Evil has no ontological existence, it's just the absence of the good (God), just like darkness is the absence of light and death is the absence of life.
That's a word-concept fallacy. What is meant by "hate sin" is not the human emotion of hatred but intolerance to sin and unwillingness to compromise with the Truth. Same goes for jealousy. The Church Fathers teach us that all our predispositions can be directed properly or improperly which decides whether they are virtues or vices. Religious fervor and piety are virtues, jealousy and envy are vices (except when used out of their usual context in figurative speech as in "jealousy over the true faith").
No, that would be dualism and it's heretical. Christians are not freemasons and we don't engage in dialectics (black and white checkerboard).
Love doesn't necessitate hate. Evil has no ontological existence, it's just the absence of the good (God), just like darkness is the absence of light and death is the absence of life.
That's a word-concept fallacy. What is meant by "hate sin" is not the human emotion of hatred but intolerance to sin and unwillingness to compromise with the Truth. Same goes for jealousy. The Church Fathers teach us that all our predispositions can be directed properly or improperly which decides whether they are virtues or vices. Religious fervor and piety are virtues, jealousy and envy are vices (except when used out of their usual context in figurative speech as in "jealousy over the true faith").