|
JUDGE NOT LEST YE BE JUDGED
By JAMES LIKOUDIS
|
It is really astonishing where some Catholics are today. They are found
sanctioning every sin that is glorified in what Pope [John-]Paul II has
termed our 'culture of death'. Here we are, we
Catholics, faced with the sinfulness of pornography, contraception,
abortion, fornication, adultery, divorce, and sodomy – all moral
evils ruining our society and devastating normal family life.
True, we hear much prattle about "renewal" and evangelization, but for the
most part Catholics appear to be in disarray and in retreat before the
powerful secular forces that shape our society and our lives. "Woe to me,
if I do not preach the Gospel," said the Apostle Paul, and in our own day
we suffer from various woes. There are evils in society we Catholic laity
are obliged to address; there are evils in the Church that must be
corrected. A non-Catholic psychiatrist has attracted attention to the
impact of dissenters in the Church:
"The Pope says same-sex [sexual activity] is wrong, but a good many of his
own priests in this country (some of them gay themselves) say the Pope is
wrong. Indeed, in much of academe and in many secondary school classrooms,
gays are said to lead a new vanguard, the wave of the future in a world
that will be more demographically secure when it has fewer
'breeders' (which is what some gay activists call heterosexuals these
days)."
(Dr. Charles W. Socarides in "America", Nov. 18th, 1995)
When the moral sense of people has, in effect, been blunted or sapped by a
Godless sex-saturated media and by rebels against Catholic doctrinal and
moral teachings who, moreover, occupy important posts in dioceses, the
result is moral intimidation leading to the silencing of all too many
Catholics. There is silence with respect to the most outrageous sacrilege,
blasphemy, and sexual perversion which no longer receive public censure.
There is no longer moral outrage that is proper to offenses committed
against God and God's law. The sayings of our divine Lord are even twisted
and perverted in the interests of such moral intimidation. Whether it is
the sacrilege of Bill and Hillary Clinton receiving Communion in a Catholic
parish or hundreds of active homosexuals receiving Communion in Rochester's
cathedral, Catholics are told "Do not judge," for Christ has said,
"Judge not lest ye be judged" (Matt. 7:1).
The fear of rendering any more judgment regarding a sinful act (clearly
condemned by Christ's saving Gospel) can be truly inhibiting and
paralyzing. It really means, of course, an abandonment of the intellect God
gave us. It means sin does not matter. Either it does not exist or exists
only to be excused by that oozing love and compassion typifying a
"feel-good" religiosity. The holy Scriptures, interestingly, never speak
this way on moral issues which, after all, involve salvation or
damnation.
Unlike some modernistic priests, St. Paul speaks in clear and unequivocal
terms:
-
"Can you not realize that the unholy will not inherit the Kingdom of
God? Do not deceive yourselves: no fornicators, idolaters, or adulterers,
no sodomites, thieves, misers, or drunkards, no slanderers or robbers
will inherit God's Kingdom" (1 Cor. 6:9-10).
-
Moreover, the same Christ who said, "Judge not, lest ye be
judged",
-
is the same Christ who also said: "Do not judge by appearances, but
judge with right judgment" (John 7:24).
-
Our divine Lord did not fear to judge unrepentant scribes and pharisees
as "hypocrites," "sons of Hell," "blind guides," "blind fools...full
of robbery and uncleanness," "whitened sepulchers which outwardly appear
to men beautiful, but within are full of dead men's bones and of all
uncleanness...full of iniquity," "serpents, brood of vipers." (Read
our Lord's invectives in Matthew, chapter 23.)
-
St. Paul judged Elymas the magician "an impostor and a thoroughgoing
fraud [and] son of Satan and enemy of all that is right" (Acts
13:10-11),
-
Ananias the high priest he judged a "whitewashed wall" (Acts
23:3).
-
It was St. Paul who judged that "there are some who trouble you, and
wish to pervert the Gospel of Christ" (Gal.1:7).
-
It was St. Paul who told the early Church: "Judge everything, hang on
to what is good" (1 Thess. 5:21).
Such plain language used by our Lord and His Apostles was justified by
their accurate assessment of others' principal vices and corrupt attitudes
and behavior and their refusal to repent of their sins. They grieved over
others' sins and how they misled others to similarly break the Commandments
of God. They did not lack sorrow and compassion toward sinners (they
were even willing to die for them, as our Lord did on the cross), but they
would not explain away the awfulness of sin or deny the connection between
sin and punishment, in this world and in the next. The "hard sayings" of
Christ concerning sin, judgment, Purgatory, Heaven, and Hell remain as true
today as ever. The inane "I'm okay, you're okay, God's okay" philosophy
dear to liberals is not that of the Gospel. It obliterates the essential
difference between good and evil.
The judgment Christians are to refrain from is judgment concerning the
eternal fate of anyone. Leave intentions, motives, and final worth to God.
We are not to confuse the judgment of the actions of people with sitting in
judgment over them as to their eternal fate. But reluctance to make
judgments concerning sinful acts is to produce that type of paralysis and
inactivity that has brought both contemporary society and American
Catholics to their present plight.
This article is reprinted from the 1998 October-December issue of The
Guardian, the newsletter of "Citizens for a Decent Community".
Mr. James
Likoudis' Homepage
|