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Life Matters —The Newsletter of the Respect Life Office
of the Diocese of Rockford
By Patricia Pitkus Bainbridge, Associate Director,
Respect Life Office
September 2003
Patricia Bainbridge is the author of a Lifelines
column published the first Friday of each month in The Observer,
official newspaper of the Catholic Diocese of
Rockford, Rockford, Illinois.
JUDGE
NOT LEST YOU BE JUDGED
A popular response heard today in regard to criticism of any number
of behaviors is “judge not lest you be judged.” Typically,
the person making this statement is responding to a pronouncement
that a particular belief or action is “wrong.” In
some instances, the assertion is offered by an individual in an
attempt to justify his or her own personal behavior.
There is no
doubt that this is an important teaching found in Holy Scripture.
However, it is one that is often misunderstood or misapplied.
Many draw on this verse from Matthew 7:1 having never studied
or even read Holy Scripture. It suits their purpose, so they use
it! This tactic is employed frequently in the area of attitudes
and actions regarding sinful sexual behavior and other attacks
on the dignity of human life.
Intolerant
Tolerance
Most of us who have publicly proclaimed that abortion, assisted
suicide, non-marital sex, co-habitation, contraception, homosexual
behavior, in vitro fertilization (IVF), etc. are wrong have been
told by some individuals that we are intolerant—that it
is not our place to judge. But isn’t this attitude itself
a judgment? By saying this, they are intolerant of our view. The
difference is that we are judging actions according to God’s
standards and they are judging according to their own private
standards.
As Chuck Colson
writes, “True tolerance is not a total lack of judgment.
It’s knowing what should be tolerated—and refusing
to tolerate that which shouldn’t.” It is recognizing
the difference between good and evil and we cannot do that without
judging. The important distinction, however, is that we are not
to judge the condition or state of a person’s soul—that
judgment is reserved for God alone.
We are called
to discern good from evil and truth from error. If we do not,
we may tacitly encourage error or sinful actions of others to
continue. The Catechism #1868 says, “…we have a responsibility
for the sins committed by others when we cooperate in them: —by
participating directly and voluntarily in them; —by ordering,
advising, praising, or approving them; —by not disclosing
or not hindering them when we have an obligation to do so; —by
protecting evil-doers.”
John 7: 24
calls us to “…judge with righteous judgment.”
Therefore, we must not be reluctant to call evil, “evil”
and good, “good.” We must never judge hearts, but
we are to judge behavior against God’s standard of right
and wrong. We have to make moral judgments and not be afraid to
stand for the truth.
We read in
James 5:19-20, “…if any one among you wanders from
the truth and some one brings him back, let him know that whoever
brings back a sinner from the error of his way will save his soul
from death and will cover a multitude of sins.”
In many instances
the faithful have allowed the popular culture to define what is
good and evil and it is time to put a stop to it. We must not
be afraid to stand up for righteousness even when it is not popular.
Copyright,
2003
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