The Hardest part....

Luke 6:37 "Do not judge, and you will not be judged. Do not condemn, and you will not be condemned. Forgive, and you will be forgiven. 38 Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over, will be poured into your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured to you."
It is by far the most difficult thing to do, to forgive, to not condemn. To show compassion to even the jerks we meet in life. It is most difficult to show such compassion when we think we are right and others are falling so short. It is painful to be judged, it is probably the main thing that turns folks off from Christianity. If I was in despair, hurting, poor, hungry, lazy, confused or simply apathetic towards life in general, it would be tender compassion, without judgement that would draw me to a better way. It would be a kind word. A kind deed done without a sermon, it would be something so beautiful, so full of love that would draw me to want something different for myself.
It is the loving deed, the compassion without condemnation that speaks to our hearts. It is the way of Jesus that leads us to him.
I will admit that its easy for me to not sit in judgement when it comes to some of the most unlovable creatures we may see on the street, but so much harder to not judge, talk badly or condemn the family member or friend that just seems to be a bit off track or be a bit confrontational.
We are a work in progress and compassion is not always an easy thing for us to live out.
This is something I keep close at hand, hoping that by reading it enough, I will understand it fully and live it. The Buddhist thought on compassion has given me a much greater understanding when it comes to passing no judgement on another and just opening our hearts.
"Compassion is really just the opening our hearts to suffering without allowing our judgments to get in the way. If someone is suffering and we judge them, this closes our hearts and fills our mind with harsh opinions. Compassion does not mean we do not see the mistakes others make; it means we have sympathy and understanding for their difficulties, knowing we are not really different from them."
~Kinrei Bassis~

Comments

This is truely the hard part of "practical Christianity". We seem to expect the most from those closest to us and our sense of hurt and/or resentment is great when they disappoint us. I find for myself that it is a long haul between "knowing" and having the grace to act on that knowing and on my better intentions.
Val said…
You are so right. This is the hardest part especially forgiveness, but then we are reminded what Jesus said on the cross. Thanks for your posts. They are so refreshing.
Julian said…
yes, this is so true. So very hard to do, but the very thing that willl bring others to Him.
Interesting - we need to simply consider the word "jerk" and where we tend to use it, and why are others considered jerks?
Patty said…
Pieceful Afternoon, I know you are wise enough to know we all fall short of being perfect all the time and sometimes we simply act like jerks ourselves and then there are times when people cut us off on the road, drive around without a child being in a car seat etc and somehow some how we lable them as jerks. Definition:
an annoyingly stupid or foolish person b: an unlikable person ; especially : one who is cruel, rude, or small-minded. In our shortcomings, we often use labels simply to fit something into a slot. Fat, skinny, wise, tolerant, etc
Renee said…
Beautiful post!
Leanne said…
Patty soo true!

I am amongst a fundamental christian home school group _SIGH!
They are very judgemental - interesting as they have shared their life before being born agains - SHOCK I am pleased they are working towards a better life - but now they judge very harshly non club members

Love Leanne

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