12th Week OT (M)
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St Anthony's, NOLA
You're
having a discussion with a friend about abortion or same-sex marriage
or some other controversial topic. You note that the behavior under
discussion is a sin. And your friend declares with great
self-righteousness, “You hypocrite, remove the wooden beam from
your eye first!” Now you're wondering if you're guilty of violating
Jesus' command to stop judging. What does Jesus mean here by “stop
judging”? We need to distinguish btw naming
a sin and finding
a person guilty of sin.
Naming a sin is simply what it sounds like. This behavior X is
sinful. Lying is sinful. Killing is sinful. Stealing is sinful. We
are saying nothing more than “abstractly considered, X is a sin.”
No one has been judged guilty. No one has been condemned as a sinner.
What Jesus is commanding us to stop doing is finding
a particular person guilty
of committing a sin. Sally lied. Bob killed. Becky stole. When we do
this, we're saying – in essence – I can read the soul of another
person and know /hisher intent and the circumstances of his/her
behavior. I know his heart; I know her mind. That's not possible. You
can only know your own intent and circumstances. This is why we say
in the confessional, “I accuse myself of the following sins. . .”
To
help us stop judging others as sinful, Jesus gives us a warning, “For
as you judge, so will you be judged, and the measure with which you
measure will be measured out to you.” That should give you chills
if you're prone to finding others guilty of sin. The standard you're
using to find others guilty will be the standard used to judge you
when the time comes. The smart to do is to stop “soul-reading”
and start asking yourself daily, “How do I want to be judged on
Judgment Day?”
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Hi Father! I remember teaching the Lord's Prayer to some youths in RCIA adapted for C&Y. I asked if they knew the prayer and they rattled it off. So I asked them, "What does that mean?" and we spent the rest of the class going line by line. When we got to the part about forgive us as we forgive others, some light bulbs went off. For me and them as I for the first time realized I was asking God to judge me as I judge others. It was a moment for sure. Thank you for this blog post. Mark
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