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FCGeorge
Guest
We are to judge one another’s actions. John 7:24 Judge not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment.Another good point. There’s 2 sides to every story and anyone outside of it will never know which is why we’d all do good to remember the commandment of Jesus that we refrain from judgment of one another.
We are to first remove the log from our own eyes and then we can help our brothers remove the splinters from theirs.
Also… how can we make a determination that a brother has “sinned against thee” without making a “judgment.”
Matthew 18:15 And if thy brother sin against thee, go, show him his fault between thee and him alone: if he hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother. 16 But if he hear thee not, take with thee one or two more, that at the mouth of two witnesses or three every word may be established. 17 And if he refuse to hear them, tell it unto the church: and if he refuse to hear the church also, let him be unto thee as the Gentile and the publican.
When we make the blanket statement that “all civilly divorced people may partake of Holy Communion unless they remarry” then we are making a very unrighteous judgment.
We are judging all abandoned spouses to be guilty of a sin worthy of abandonment.
We are “judging” that all abandoning spouses had “just cause” for abandoning their spouses.
2386 It can happen that one of the spouses is the innocent victim of a divorce decreed by civil law; this spouse therefore has not contravened the moral law. There is a considerable difference between a spouse who has sincerely tried to be faithful to the sacrament of marriage and is unjustly abandoned, and one who through his own grave fault destroys a canonically valid marriage.179
It is strange to me that people will say, “there are two sides to every story” but then be willing to listen to the spouse who abandons the marriage and judge the abandoned spouse guilty of a sin worthy of abandonment without even talking with her.
Bryan
LOVE SO AMAZING