Reflections on Judgment

“You lie.”
“Beyonce’s video is better.”
“We are turning this nation socialist.”
“I want Obama to die.”
“He is a horrible person because he said X.”

I feel that somehow all of these are strangely connected. Based in a society that thrives on pointing out flaws and living on broken systems and never wanting to realize something better. In reality it seems that our plight for individual happiness has made us more upset, judgmental, and unhappy than ever. Our fringe groups bash other systems for having no control over their totalitarian terrorist government regimes then accuse Obama of being Hitler? Do they even know or realize that in these other countries the government bodies are actually the ones doing the raping and pillaging? And I’m not just talking money.

In light of all this it seems highly critical and narcissistic for so many people (Americans really) to be focusing on their own likes/dislikes, i.e. judgments, as the only approach to something. Showing no room for compromise or deliberation points to a God complex of being all knowing, which I can’t say I know of any one person who is even close.

Not only does individual effort have to be made to stop the judgments from coming from our own mouths, but a cry of prayer to our Father for intercession and a global softening of hearts towards others who may be different from ourselves. Sound like a big enough task? It is. But just asking God to change our hearts and looking at everything through the lens of our Father God is a massive start.

The deprivation of our world is only made more apparent by our autocratic need to look out for only ourselves or those like us.

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I admit it…

I’m wrong.

I have been wrong about a lot, right about some.

But this weekend I realized that my slant on life has been just that, a slant, bent in some way, not pure.

The world’s patterns have gotten to me and I have been defensive and callous and uninclusive (if that’s a word) when it comes to others. I have heard it written about and talked about many times, but this weekend I finally got it. I am giving up my American politics for my call to be a disciple of Christ.

Will I still get a little antsy when people make unnecessary judgments about our political leaders? Yes.

But it goes both ways in Matthew when it says “Judge not lest you be judged.”

I should not judge them for their opinions or judgments, whatever they may be. I should be concerned with my call to live out my life like Jesus, no matter what the cost. Does this mean being silent about some issues that are specially American? It probably does. Quiet is not my strong suit when coupled with passion. But like I said, my slant has been all wrong. Maybe now there will be more room for love, more room for those acts that the church (me) should have been doing all along, rather than crying to my government to do it. Because just like they do not own me, my allegiance is not to them. I have a choice.

I choose to live without the divisiveness.

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