Qua bài Tin Mừng
hôm nay, Chúa Giêsu đã dậy chúng ta không nên phán xét bất cứ ai và chúng ta
cũng chẳng có quyền xét đoán ai cả (ngoài chúa Giêsu là đấng thẩm phán nhân từ)
bởi chúng ta không thể hiểu những gì đã và đang xảy ra cho người khác và chúng
ta chẳng hiểu nổi những đau khổ riêng của họ. Hơn nữa chúng ta không có đủ những
sự kiện bằng cớ để lên án người khác.
Chúa Giêsu đã nói một trong những lý
do mà chúng ta thường làm hằng ngày là lên án người khác vì muốn tìm cách để dìm
họ xuống và đưa mình lên cao hơn hơn ai hết. Trong khi chúng ta đang săm soi tập
trung vào những thiếu sót nhỏ nhặt của người khác, mà chúng ta không nhìn ra
cái sai, cái xấu của mình vì chúng ta đang bận rộn và tìm cách để che đậy những
cái khuyết điểm nghiêm trọng của chính chúng ta; trong đó có những tội nói
hành, nói xấu, nói sau lưng người khác đệ uy tín của họ. Mặt khác, chúng ta thường không thích hay miễn
cưỡng để khen thưởng hay khíck lệ hay đánh giá về một người nào đó một cách
khách quan.
Hôm nay Chúa muốn
chúng ta hãy chịu khó nhìn vào chính mình một trung thực hơn và không nên xét
đoán, phê bình những người khác một ách tiêu cực, Bời vì chúng ta thường nghĩ tốt
về mình và nghĩ xấu về người khác, thích khoe khoang về mình nhiều hơn là những
gì chúng ta cần phải nghĩ đến về những người khác nữa.
Lạy Chúa xin giúp
chúng con biết lắng nghe, và đừng bao giờ xét đoán người khác, biết khiến tốn
mà không khoe khoang về chính mình và nghĩ tới sự thật, và biết tôn trọng những
người khác.
12th
Week in Ordinary Time
There must be few
of us to whom today’s Gospel does not apply. How many of us can say that we
never sit in judgment on others, that we never speak disparagingly of others?
Gossiping is one of our favorite pastimes and it is done mostly in the absence
of those we criticize. We don’t have the courage to say things to a person's
face.
Yet, as Jesus
says, we have no right to pass judgment on anyone because, so much of the time,
we simply do not have all the facts nor can we enter into the mind of another
person. And, as Jesus says, one of the reasons we knock people down is to lift
ourselves up. While we are nitpicking focusing on the trivial failings of
others, we are actually trying to cover up our own much more serious
shortcomings — of which behind-the-back bitching of others is one. On the other
hand, we are often very slow to offer an objective appraisal of another person
when asked.
Let us take an
honest look at ourselves and reflect on the content of our conversations with
others. It usually says a lot more about ourselves than what we think we are
saying about others.
12th
Week in Ordinary Time
Monday of the Twelfth Week in
Ordinary Time
Jesus
said to his disciples: “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. Why do you notice the splinter in your brother’s eye, but
do not perceive the wooden beam in your own eye?” Matthew 7:1–3
Sadly,
this tendency is far more common than most of us would like to admit. We live
in a world in which it is very common to condemn, criticize and judge. This
growing secular tendency, in turn, powerfully influences our thinking and
actions.
Why
is it so easy to judge others? Why is it so easy to see the failures of others,
dwell on their sin, point out their weaknesses and speak of their faults to
others? Perhaps part of the reason is that many people are not at peace within
their own souls. In an unfortunate way, condemning another brings with it a
certain twisted satisfaction. But it’s a “satisfaction” that will never
satisfy. The desire to condemn, criticize and judge will only grow all the
stronger the more these actions are committed. If you struggle with these sins,
then listen to the words of Jesus. “Stop judging…”
Oftentimes
the person who judges others does not even realize they are judging. This is
why our Lord poses the question, “Why do you notice the splinter in your
brother’s eye, but do not perceive the wooden beam in your own eye?” If that
stings even a little bit, then know that our Lord asks that question of you.
And He asks it with deep love for you, desiring that you will hear Him,
understand, and respond.
The
truth is that being judgmental of others causes far more harm to the one who
judges than to the one who is judged. Certainly being judged is not pleasant.
But the act of being judged by others is not a sin. However, the act of judging
others is a sin. And it can be a grave sin. This sin leaves the one who judges
with an empty and angry heart. Love is lost in the soul who judges.
If
these words seem unpleasant, that’s because they are. But sometimes we need to
face the unpleasant truth in order to change. The Cross was unpleasant, but it
was also the greatest act of love ever known. Facing our sin of judgmentalness
is unpleasant, but doing so is the only way to be free. Honesty with ourselves
is an act of love given to God, to ourselves and to those whom we need to stop
judging.
Reflect,
today, upon these challenging words from Jesus. Read the Scripture passage
above a few times and then prayerfully ponder it. Use it as an examination of
your own conscience. Try to be honest, humble and attentive to any ways that
Jesus speaks this to you. Some will find that they have grave tendencies toward
judgmentalness. Others will see less serious ways. But everyone who lacks
complete perfection will find some ways in which they need to be more
compassionate, merciful, forgiving and understanding of others. Be open to
these truths and allow our Lord to lift the heavy burden of this sin from your
own life.
My merciful Lord, You and You alone are the true Judge. Only You
judge with mercy and justice. Give me the grace I need to abandon my own
self-righteous judgmentalness so that I will be free to love You and to love
others with my whole heart. Free me from the burden of these sins, dear Lord,
so that I can more easily see Your goodness in others and rejoice in Your
presence in their lives. Jesus, I trust in You.
12th
Week in Ordinary Time
Opening Prayer:
Lord,
you know human nature so well! Bless me as I reflect on your words so that I
may be a messenger of your mercy, not of judgment.
Encountering Christ:
1.
Stop Judging: Jesus’s command was
pretty clear in this passage—in one sense. Rash judgment and criticism of
others is a sin, one that can easily become a habitual pattern of mind and
speech. It is this tendency Jesus warns us against here. Why is it that, in an
emotional encounter, it can be a lot easier to criticize someone than to stay
silent or praise them? Jesus said, “A good person out of the store of goodness
in his heart produces good, but an evil person out of a store of evil produces
evil; for from the fullness of the heart the mouth speaks” (Luke 6:45). We need
to form our hearts to look at the positive in life’s circumstances! As St.
Maximilian Kolbe says, “Do not criticize! To speak only of the faults of others
does not represent total reality, for every man, in addition to his faults,
also has virtues, a good side.”
2.
Judging Has Consequences: Did you ever
notice that when you smile at a stranger, he or she has a tendency to smile
back? A small sliver of heavenly joy has been shared between two souls.
Unfortunately, however, when we adopt a critical caustic tone toward others,
they tend to respond with the same tone, and no joy has been exchanged. Perhaps
blinded by the wooden beam in our own eye, we have closed ourselves off to a
sharing of goodness by judging the other. What we fail to notice is the
presence of a divine spark in that person. Jesus is there, even if they’re not
aware of it. A harsh word spoken against our brother or sister is spoken
against Christ.
3.
Removing His Splinter: Jesus calls us to
live virtuous lives (to extract the beam from our own eyes) so that we can
prayerfully judge the actions of others. How else are we to remove the splinter
from our brother’s eye? Once we have identified the beam in our own eye and
realized our complete dependence on God for the grace to reform, we are ready,
with great charity, to identify a splinter in another’s eye and strive to help
remove it as an act of familial love.
Conversation with Christ: Lord, over and
over again you call me to recognize my sinful nature, the beam in my eye, and
turn to you for mercy and forgiveness. Then, full of love and gratitude for the
freedom I have been given to live as a child of the Father, humbled not hypocritical,
I am prepared to approach others as an extension of your mercy and invite them
to turn away from sin. This loving fraternal correction bears no resemblance to
criticism or rash judgment that stems from a hardened heart.
Resolution: Lord, today by
your grace I will examine myself for “beams” that blind me from seeing your
presence in my brother or sister.
Monday
12th in Ordinary (Bishop Baron) Time 2017
Friends, in today’s Gospel Jesus
commands us to stop judging others. He asks, “Why do you notice the splinter in
your brother’s eye, but do not perceive the wooden beam in your own eye?” We
are exceptionally good at seeing the fault in others, but we are exceptionally
adept at ignoring it in ourselves. There
was a very popular book that came out when I was a teenager. It was called, I’m
Okay and You’re Okay. It represented the culture of exculpation and
feel-good-about-yourself. Not many years ago, Christina Aguilera crooned, “I am
beautiful in every single way and your words can’t get me down.” Look at so
many of the debates today: the attitude that is winning is one of
self-invention and self-assertion. Who are you to tell me how to behave?
In all of this, we are fundamentally
looking away from our guilt, our fault, our darkness. We are effectively
drugging ourselves, dulling the pain of real self-consciousness. In the
process, we turn ourselves into God, pretending to be absolute, flawless, and
impervious to criticism. So “remove the wooden beam from your eye first; then
you will see clearly to remove the splinter from your brother’s eye..”
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