Quite true, but those wonderful words do nothing to erase Jesus’ very real words of condemnation from the Gospels.
– Mark L. Chance.
So what are you saing Mark? Are you saying that we should condemn other people? That we should judge other people? Is it that you’re saying He did, in fact, sit in judgement on people when He was on earth and that means that we should also? It doesn’t suprise me to be honest from reading your posts before, but I do struggle to see your perspective, my brother in Christ, because it does seem to me to be rather out of kilter with what the Church teaches. For example Raniero Cantalamessa (ever heard of him?) states in his work Contemplating the Trinity:
The divine perichoresis is the path to true unity that we should follow in the church. St. Paul indicates its foundation when he says that we are “individually members of one another” (Romans 12:5). The perichoresis in God is based on the unity of nature, and in us on the fact that we are “one body and one spirit” (see 1 Corinthians 12:12-13).
The apostle helps us to understand what it means in practice to live the perichoresis, or mutual interdependence: “if one member suffers, all suffer together; if one member is honored, all rejoice together” (1 Corinthians 12:26); “Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ” (Galatians 6:2). The “burdens” of others are sickness, limitations, anxieties, and even defects and sins. Living out the perichoresis means “identifying ourselves” with others, to walk, as we say, in their shoes, to seek first to understand rather than to judge.
In the Trinity, every Person speaks well of the others, and this reminds us of the exhortation from St. James, “Do not speak evil against one another, bethren” (4:11). There is only one “place” in the world where the rule of “love your neighbour as yourself” is perfectly put into practice, and that is the Trinity! Every divine Person loves the others as himself.
pages 17- 18.
Now bearing in mind that the Trinity is the centre and focus of Theology, those words seem fairly commanding- do not judge and try and be a brother to all men, to walk in their shoes, to understand their pain and
NOT to judge them!