Does
not judging mean I have to tolerate abuse or evil behavior against
me? The perps would like us to
think so. Abusers pervert the whole “don't judge” principle to
their unholy advantage. So let's get this sorted out and bring some
balance here.
Judging,
accountability, and our emotions are all totally
independent. Our society,
and even the church, constantly gets these confused. You can forgive
someone and hence not be judging them, while at the same time holding
them accountable for their behavior, while still being angry and
hurt. If their behavior was criminal, you can prosecute them to the
fullest extent of the law while completely forgiving them.
We
should always
hold abusers and criminals accountable for their behavior, for two
main reasons:
- To protect others from being victimized like we were.
- So (hopefully) the person, when confronted with their sin, repents and turns to the Lord who sets them free from it, healing them from the pain in their lives that made them vulnerable to that sin in the first place.
Working
through our emotions over the matter is totally separate from whether
we hold the other person accountable or not. If the sin against us
was grievous, we may need to walk our emotions through the stages of
grief (denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance). Get
Christian counseling, inner healing, deliverance, probably all of the
above, whatever help you need to work through it. It's normal to need
help to work through the emotions in a healthy way. An excellent plan
is to work with both a Christian counselor and your Pastor.
Forgiveness
doesn't mean pretending it never happened and or not holding the
person accountable. It means releasing them from owing us anything
for it. Because we realize they are not what they do. We can still
set healthy boundaries as long as our heart is right – not to
punish them but either to (1) keep ourselves safe, or (2) hold them
accountable (for example, if it's an authority-to-subordinate
relationship like parent-child or employer-employee).
Judging
and forgiving are not activities centered in our emotions, but in our
will. They have nothing to do with how we feel about the person who
hurt us. They have everything to do with what we choose to believe
about that person. They have everything to do with what we declare
about that person.
So
what do we declare about the person who wronged us? Are they the evil
they did to us? That's judging. Or can we declare that they are not
the evil they did to us? That's forgiveness. It really is that simple
(but it's not easy).
Mercy
toward others triumphs over the judgement we deserve.
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