Fnord wrote:
According to the twelfth commandment ("Love your neighbor as you would yourself be loved") ... No.
From a theological standpoint, you may be right. But some Christian traditions seem to have pronounced misanthropic tendencies, based on their emphasis of certain beliefs:
1) All humans are miserable sinners and unworthy of anything except through the love of God (which many people don't accept);
2) Satan controls society,
3) Christians are called to be 'in this world, but not of it"
One fundamentalist sermon on 'miserable sinners' is enough to show that some Christians really do get off on misanthropy. I also have a problem with the way that good works are interpreted by many churches - on one hand, Jesus said that good fruit doesn't come from bad trees. On the other hand, some churches devalue good works compared to certain abstract doctrines - the 'faith through salvation alone' concept is hard for me to accept ... people latch on to the idea that they are saved through doctrine, and it doesn't seem to change their life that much.
The churches I have been to are not misanthropic - they put a positive spin on things. But there are some hymns that come to mind (Amazing grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a wretch like me ...." that beautiful song does come from a self-flagellating tradition.