LGBTQ activists love to throw Jesus’ words about not being judgmental in the face of any Christian who says sexual relations between two men or two women is a sin. Likely as not they’ll also throw out their favorite invective as well. They’ll say anyone who ‘judges’ homosexual behavior as disordered is a homophobe – a ‘hater’ of homosexuals.
The ‘homophobe’ invective is itself judgmental, but dwelling on that is just more finger pointing. The real crux of the matter is the semantics of what being judgmental means.
Don’t Judge
In Mathew 7:1-5 Jesus says,
“Stop judging, that you may not be judged. For as you judge, so will you be judged, and the measure with which you measure will be measured out to you.
Jesus’ words seem to give credibility to the LGBTQ stance. And those words are repeated even more forcefully in Luke 6:37: “Stop judging and you will not be judged. Stop condemning and you will not be condemned. Forgive and you will be forgiven.”
Even in the Letter of James (James 4:12) we are told: “There is one lawgiver and judge who is able to save or to destroy. Who then are you to judge your neighbor?”
Recognize Sin
But recognizing the sinfulness of an act is not the same as passing judgement on a person. It is not judgmental. We see stupid, dumb, and bad behavior all the time, often on a daily basis. Usually we do not hesitate to chastise bad behavior.
Have you driven behind someone texting while driving lately? Did you happen to comment on the stupidity of the driver’s action, even if only to yourself?
Recognizing and calling out stupid, bad, or immoral behavior is not passing judgement on the person doing the something stupid, bad, or immoral.
Say you know a man and woman who decide to cohabitate instead of getting married and you call their attention to the sinfulness of their arrangement. This does not mean that you are judging them. It only means that you are calling their attention to the sinfulness of their decision. Living as husband and wife is a sin if the man and woman are not married.
Or let’s say you have a friend or coworker who is constantly boasting about his her latest ‘amorous’ affair. You point out to the individual that fornication is a sin in the eyes of God. It does not mean that you are being judgmental or passing judgment on the person. It only means exactly what you said.
Correcting the Sinner
In fact, we are told in the New Testament that we should correct sinners:
“My brothers, if one of you should wander from the truth and someone should bring him back, remember this: Whoever turns a sinner from the error of his way will save him from death and cover over a multitude of sins” (James 5:19).
And St. Paul tells us in Galatians:
“Brothers, even if a person is caught in some transgression, you who are spiritual should correct that one in a gentle spirit, looking to yourself, so that you also may not be tempted. Bear one another’s burdens, and so you will fulfill the law of Christ” (Gal 6:1).
While in Colossians he says:
“Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, as in all wisdom you teach and admonish one another . . .” (Col 3:16).
And in John 8:3-11, Jesus admonished the scribes and Pharisees for condemning woman caught in adultery; He did not chastise them for recognizing the sinfulness of the woman’s act. He also told the woman to go and sin no more.
Unfortunately, many Catholics and other Christians these days are being deceived. They are buying into the idea that correcting a sinner is being judgmental. But those who espouse such nonsense are only attempting to shame Christians into remaining silent. This is the devil’s handiwork. The devil is trying to make sure sin continues to flourish by attempting to prevent us from correcting one another.
Promoting Sin
And sin is flourishing these days. It’s also getting a lot of help from both un-elected and elected government representatives and officials. The SCOTUS decisions on abortion and legalizing same sex ‘marriage’ are two prime examples of government promoting sin. And the Biden administration blatantly endorses both abortion and same sex ‘marriage.’
But cardinals, bishops, and priests also condone sin by refusing to call out sinfulness when it is standing in front of them. As any judge will tell you, silence implies consent.
And when some clerics do speak up, they deny or ignore Church teaching. Washington D.C. Archbishop Cardinal Gregory refusing to deny Communion to abortion promoter and same sex ‘marriage’ advocate Joe Biden certainly sends the wrong message. And in Belgium, Johan Bonny, Bishop of Antwerp, has openly rejected the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith’s Responsum stating that it is illicit to bless same-sex unions.
As CS writer Dennis Dillon noted very recently, the mixed messages get confusing.
Chastise Sinners . . . and Stupidity
Catholicism is a religion of faith and reason. Too many people today, however, do not seem to have the ability to reason and think logically. Perhaps such stupidity is why we now have a society that is drifting into paganism.
In the Catholic high school I attended a required course for all freshmen was a course in Logic. I wonder how many government-run (i.e., public) schools have the same requirement. (My bet is none of them.)
Stupidity is all around us today. It is not judgmental to recognize it. And it’s not judgmental to call it out.
I laughed out loud while reading an article at Crisis recently. Writer Casey Chalk was commenting on an op-ed in The Washington Post, written by Lynne Stahl, a humanities librarian at West Virginia University, and “a self-described “cisgender lesbian”.”
Chalk wrote:
“Stahl’s op-ed is overflowing with contrived, self-indulgent nonsense demonstrative of how absurd and unserious the secular academy has truly become in its adoption of pseudoscience and spurious jargon.”
One would think the once prestigious Washington Post would at least still have a solid grasp of good writing and not allow nonsense to fill its pages. One would also think a “humanities librarian” would have at least some understanding of logic and reason. But it seems one would be wrong on both counts.
Near the end of his article, Chalk sums up the problem in Stahl’s article: “Woke sexuality, as Stahl’s article so patently proves, descends into incomprehensible jibber jabber.”
He hit the nail squarely on the head. We are living in an age of jibber jabber. And what’s scary is that this jibber jabber nonsense is being treated as profound thinking!
Pope St. Pius X saw this coming over 100 years ago.
From Modernism to Post-Modernism
Dr. Jeffrey Mirus once described Modernism very succinctly: “Modernism is essentially a secularizing of Catholicism in accordance with the prevailing ideas in the larger culture.”
Pope St. Pius X first warned the faithful about the evils of modernist thinking in 1907, in the encyclical Pascendi Dominici Gregis. Years’ later modernism was still on the ascent. One of the primary goals of Vatican II was to renew the Church in the face of the rising tide of modernism. Many think it failed to achieve this goal.
But today many say we are now in the age of Post-Modernism.
Clifford Staples, in an article at Crises a few years ago, described how post-modern man views life. He concluded the article thusly:
“Post-modern man is authentic when he is true to himself, not to reality. To live authentically means living in accord with what you feel/believe, whether or not what you feel/believe is true by any objective standard. Everyone is entitled to his own truth, even when everyone’s truth can’t possibly be true. When contradictory truths collide, as they must, the outcome is determined by power, not by reason. Truth is not discovered; it is imposed. By his willingness to ignore reality post-modern man shows himself to be foolish … and dangerous.”
(It’s worth taking time to read the entire article.)
This describes the post-modern world we live in today. Reason has to give way to power. But the power is stupid, foolish, and sinful.
Don’t Be Deceived
Hans Christian Andersen’s the “Emperor’s New Clothes” story has come to life. The “swindlers” have are trying to deceive everyone. We need to be like the little child at the end of the story.
As Catholics we should stand up for truth and reason. We should always recognize sin and not hesitate to “admonish one another.”
So don’t buy into the ‘don’t be judgmental’ trap. Calling out sinful acts and actions is part and parcel of being a good Christian.
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