Why I Hate Religion But I Love Jesus
Also known as: Jesus > Religion · I Hate X But I Love Y
"Why I Hate Religion, But Love Jesus" is a spoken word poem video by Jefferson Bethke that exploded on YouTube in January 2012, racking up 7 million views in its first 48 hours and sparking a massive online debate about the relationship between Christianity and organized religion2. The video spawned image macro memes using the snowclone format "I Hate X, But I Love Y," along with dozens of response videos and a broader cultural conversation about what it means to be Christian in the internet age1.
Overview
The original video features a then-22-year-old Jefferson Bethke delivering a four-minute spoken word poem over a cinematic score, arguing that Jesus and organized religion are fundamentally opposed1. Bethke's central claim, that "Jesus came to abolish religion," drew sharp lines between personal faith in Christ and the institutional trappings of the church, touching on hypocrisy, legalism, and self-righteousness2.
The video's slick production, quotable lines, and provocative thesis made it instantly shareable across social media3. It quickly became both a rallying cry for young evangelicals tired of churchgoing norms and a target for theologians, pastors, and atheists alike8. The meme side grew out of the video's easily parodied structure, with users swapping in absurd or contradictory pairings for the "I Hate X, But I Love Y" format4.
Jefferson Bethke, a born-again Christian from Puyallup, Washington, uploaded "Why I Hate Religion, But Love Jesus" to his YouTube channel (bball1989) on January 10, 20125. Bethke described it as "a poem I wrote to highlight the difference between Jesus and false religion," drawing on his own past as a self-described party kid who was "addicted to pornography" while putting on a churchgoing facade11.
The video was posted to Reddit on January 11, where it received 839 upvotes and 421 downvotes4. Within three days, it had 6 million views and over 64,000 comments on YouTube6. By five days, the count hit 12 million, with over 86,000 tweets and 1.4 million Facebook shares4.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
Media
How to Use This Meme
The meme version of "Why I Hate Religion, But Love Jesus" typically works in one of two formats:
Snowclone format: Take the "I Hate X, But I Love Y" structure and swap in a contradictory or absurd pairing. The humor comes from the internal contradiction. Examples: "I hate Fascism, but I love Hitler" or "I hate calories, but I love cake."
Image macro format: Use a still of Bethke from the video (usually mid-delivery) and overlay contradictory text in the Advice Animals style. Variants like "Contradiction Guy" or "Scumbag Jefferson Bethke" add a Scumbag Steve hat or similar overlay to emphasize the hypocrisy angle.
Both formats work best when the pairing is obviously self-defeating, mirroring the critics' reading of Bethke's original argument.
Cultural Impact
Full History
Fun Facts
Bethke's YouTube username was "bball1989," a basketball reference that gives no hint of the religious content that would make him famous.
The video was tweeted about over 86,000 times and shared on Facebook 1.4 million times in just five days, making it one of the fastest-spreading religious videos in YouTube history at that time.
Annie Murphy Paul's TIME analysis compared Bethke's spoken word style to the oral traditions behind *The Odyssey* and *The Iliad*, arguing that rhyme and rhythm trigger the same memory mechanisms that kept ancient stories alive for generations.
Bethke started walking with Jesus in 2008 and admitted in his email to DeYoung that for his "first few years" he had "a warped/poor paradigm of the church".
The rapper Lecrae shared DeYoung's critique with his Facebook followers, encouraging fans to think critically about the video's theology.
Derivatives & Variations
Scumbag Jefferson Bethke:
Image macro using Bethke's photo with a Scumbag Steve hat, posted to Reddit's Advice Animals subreddit starting January 13, 2012[4].
Contradiction Guy / Contradiction Chris:
Alternative names for the image macro series on meme generator sites, emphasizing the perceived logical contradiction in Bethke's argument[4].
"I Hate X, But I Love Y" snowclone:
The general format spun off from the video's title, used for absurd or ironic contradictions (e.g., "I hate Fascism, but I love Hitler")[6].
Response videos:
Multiple spoken word rebuttals mimicking Bethke's style and production quality, including one that countered: "You make some points, that I will give you, but to throw religion away is a slap to the one who made you"[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (12)
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- 5Why I Hate Religion, But Love Jesus - Wikipediaencyclopedia
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