James Schall–“Who Am I to Judge?” Revisited

The glorious run of “Who am I to judge?” has often become a tool to reverse the moral order. It can confuse the liberation that comes from acting rationally within metaphysical and moral order with acting “freely,” wherein nothing exists but what “I judge,” whatever I choose.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Religion News & Commentary, Anthropology, Ethics / Moral Theology, Media, Other Churches, Pope Francis, Religion & Culture, Roman Catholic, Theology

One comment on “James Schall–“Who Am I to Judge?” Revisited

  1. Charles52 says:

    “Who am I to judge” was said in a specific context. The pope was asked about a priest he was moving into a new job, I think at the Vatican Bank. The man had been involved with a homosexual scandal in South America, then called to the Vatican to run the guest house for a decade. I think that’s called penance. At any rate, this is the man of good will seeking the Lord. So the question that needs asking is who we are to judge a repentant sinner? Jesus said to the woman caught in adultery: does no one condemn you? … neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more.

    Ought we who call Him “Lord” do other than He did?