And His disciples asked Him, saying, "Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?" Jesus answered, "Neither this man nor his parents sinned, but that the works of God should be revealed in him." John 9:2-3
Jesus has told us the same things in many different ways, yet we still fail to accept the message.
This above passage talks about judging. We are called not to judge. We should accept this as the end of the story, but we always want more. At least, the actions that I observe both around me and even in me show that we all want more. We want a better explanation on how not to judge. We want things to be made plain and simple enough. Or so we say.
In this event, Jesus adds an important detail: our judging prevents us from seeing the works of God. When we judge, we start to place ourselves on a pedestal constructed of pride. In fact, we attempt to build a throne that equals God's with our own pride. However, we end up being the blind people whenever we do so.
Whenever we decide to judge, we put our minds and our whole bodies' resources into judging rather than helping and loving. The disciples, rather than trying to heal the blind or help him at the very least, decide to judge, forgetting everything else that they had been taught. In the same way, we abandon everything good, everything loving, when we focus our attention on judging. Rather than going out and helping others, we end up hurting both ourselves and those in need. Whenever we don't show love to those in need, we divide the Kingdom of God and destroy it. That's not what we are called to do.
We are called to unite. We are called to love. We are called to be God's Kingdom on earth.
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