Sitting on the London Underground this week, I became
conscious of a tendency I have to judge others, positively or negatively, by
their appearance.
Before me were the hard-working builder with paint-stained cargo trousers,
“Polska” on his shirt. The tired-looking office worker, preoccupied with a
colourful game on her phone. The Fijian student seemed powerful in rugby gear. The
Daily Mail reader…you see, there I go again! The tendency I have (and I am not
alone surely) to pigeon-hole people based on their appearance is not only a regrettable,
but sinful one.
I was made especially conscious of it by reading Catherine Marshall’s
thought-provoking piece, “Fasting on Criticalness”, on the train down from
Sheffield. In it she describes her fasting from her own tendency to judge
others and situations, instead engaging in exploration of her relationship with
God and God’s people.
So, I began to look around the carriage, landing eyes briefly
on each individual, praising God for something about them and turning those
thoughts into unspoken intercession.
I was immediately reminded that of the huge potential of
fasting. Not for exhibitions of holy living, but for removing those things that
occupy spaces where God can be active. Jesus warned against the human tendency to
judge others (Matthew 7:1-5). Judging
others is tempting – not least, perhaps especially, for Christians. It can seduce
us into pride for the choices we make or doctrine we espouse.
Instead, fasting from critical judgement brings us into a
creative place where we begin to see the potential of others with clarity, and
in doing so we both honour God’s unique love for every human being, and we fulfil
our purpose as those called – not to judge – but to love as God loves.
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