True, but I think you misunderstand what judging is.
To judge someone is to judge the state of their SOUL.
Judging is saying, for example: “sisters who do not wear a habit are bad human beings with corrupt souls.”
Judging is not saying, for example: “sisters who do not wear a habit may possible hold questionable beliefs.”
Only God can judge the human heart. Therefore, no one can make statements like the first because they are clearing trying to play the role of God and see the soul, which they cannot.
That is judging.
But to make a statement about externals is not necessarily judging. For example, it IS true that some sisters who do not wear a habit hold questionable beliefs. That is not a judgement, it is a fact. And the same can be said for some sisters who wear the full habit, some lay people , etc.
Fine, I’ll be blunt then if you want to play semantics. Forming an opinion of anyone, whether they be a cleric, religious, or lay based on what they’re wear is shallow. It’s called
stereotyping.
Do you want to hear an analogous statement to what you’re saying? “All priests are pedophiles”. Or to play into your obsession with clothing, “if they wear a Roman collar, don’t let them near children”. Because obviously because some priests abused children then they’re all pedophiles.
We all know that the above paragraph is wrong, and that stereotyping doesn’t work. Because it takes out the individual personality of each person in said stereotype and just assumes a perfect bunch of carbon copies across the whole subset.
And yes, some people did die because they knew their government was telling them not to wear it or risk consequences, but they chose to wear it anyways and risk the consequences. It is not that the habit was their loyalty, of course Christ was probably first in their lives, but they had a choice and they chose to respond according the the response that would put them at greater risk
See, the habit really has nothing to do with it. If they wore regular clothing and get asked by the authorities whether they follow Christ, what do you think their answer is going to be? Yes of course. They get killed anyways. We’re talking about some pretty paranoid times, it’s not like there wasn’t a whole industry built around snitching.
So, what is your answer to that then? Is their martyrdom worth less than that of a habited person? Of course not. A martyr in secret is just as good as a martyr in public and brings just as much glory to God. Nobody else knows? Boo hoo, so you never get to be a canonized saint. You don’t do good and just acts to get noticed (not unless you’re a politician).
I’m feeling like you’ve missed the
entire point of the Gospel that is read each and every Ash Wednesday. Witness is good, but the way you’re taking it is that they’re only purpose in life is to get noticed. News Flash: Sisters do not exists to be a living billboard that says “look at how pious and Christian I am”. They’re there to serve the poor in the tradition of St. Francis, or St. Vincent de Paul, or a dozen other spiritual founders.
Essentially, it boils down to this (I and others have said this before): There are at least a dozen different orthodox Catholic spiritualities, and none are “better” then the others. It’s a big Church, there is no such thing as a single template that every Catholic should follow. There are some constants in all of them (Mass or Divine Liturgy on Sundays and Holy Days, confession, prayer to name some), but there are some differences. That included the Eastern Catholics, who have different spiritualities then us in the West. There are Catholics who are charismatic, or Marian, or have a devotion to a particular saint, or those who feel close to the Passion, or those in mystic theology, or those who are contemplative, or those who work with the poor, or missionaries, or ecumenism, and on and on and any combination of any of those. You can’t point to any of those and say they’re “better” or “worse”, and if you think you can then, frankly, you’re not very mature in your own faith and spirituality.