This is a typical commentary on the issue of God potentially hating people:
http://www.compellingtruth.org/does-God-hate.html
It doesn't settle the matter.
Other commentary's:
Barne's: "I will love them no more - So He saith, in the beginning; “I will have no more mercy upon the house of Israel, but I will utterly take them away” Hosea 1:6.: “This was a national judgment, and so involved the whole of them, as to their outward condition, which they enjoyed as members of that nation, and making up one beady politic. It did not respect the spiritual condition of single persons, and their relation, in this respect, to God.” As individuals, they were, “not cut off from God‘s favor and tokens of His love, nor from the power of becoming members of Christ, whenever any of them should come to Him. It only struck them forever out of that “house of the Lord” from which they were then driven,” or from hopes that that kingdom should be restored, which God said, He would cause to cease."
Coffman's: ""There I hated them ..." Smith and many others pointed out that "hate" is not to be understood in absolute terms, because God hates no man;[29] nevertheless, a rejection of the most violent and terminal dimensions is indicated"
Gills: "I will love them no more; which is not to be understood of the special love and favor the Lord bears to his own people in Christ, which is everlasting and unchangeable; but of his general and providential favor and regard unto these people, which he had manifested in bestowing many great and good things upon them; but now would do so no more; he would do nothing to them, or for them, that looked like love, or be interpreted of it, but all the reverse; and, by his behavior to them, show that they were the objects of his aversion and hatred; and this was to continue, and has continued, and will continue unto the time of their conversion in the latter day, when "all Israel shall be saved", Romans 11:26; "
The Hosea passage IS difficult:
"All their evil is at Gilgal; indeed, I
came to hate them there! Because of the wickedness of their deeds I will drive them out of My house! I will love them
NO more; All their princes are rebels."
Note that it indicates that God indeed DID love them, but "because of their wickedness and deeds," He "will love them
NO more." Now, as the only unforgivable sin is blasphemy against the Holy Spirit - because that is an "eternal sin." So, how might that play out here?
Even Gleason Archer didn't address this Hosea passage.