Balance Between Judgment And Compassion

Parents, Have You Found The Balance Between Judgment And Compassion?

Social media hadn’t been invented yet (thank heavens!) when my kids were very small, and I had never heard of the term #minime, but if I had, one of my sons would definitely have qualified for the role. Given the similarity of our temperaments, one would imagine a high degree of mutual sympathy, a level of understanding that would have bound us together in blessed unity and daily harmony.

Nope.

We drove each other crazy on almost every level, and the Sermon on the Mount has given me words to understand why, as mothers, we get so frustrated with our children:

“Judge not, that you be not judged. For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you. Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye? Or how can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when there is the log in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye.”

Matthew 7:1-5

My Log and Your Speck

The speck of sawdust and the log Jesus is referring to are both composed of the same cellulose and lignin molecules. The difference is only in degree.

We are prone to being hard on others for a minor offense when we are guilty of the same offense—and maybe even to a greater degree! And when it’s a mother and a child with the log and speck scenario, the adult in the room has to take greater responsibility and practice more sweet reasonableness.

For example, if a (ahem) certain mother has her nose stuck in a book at every opportunity and tends to be rather oblivious of the random sock under the coffee table, a certain mindfulness is in order when she addresses her son’s chaotic bedroom and the fact that he has read three Hardy Boys chapters instead of organizing his Lego creations.

My friend Barbara Harper calls this “supposing” and in a recent post she warns quick-to-judge mums:
“We even carry suppositions into our homes: when we hear a crash and see our son with a bat, when our teenager comes in past curfew, when our husband leaves a mess on the counter. If we’re not careful, tempers flare and we react based on our assumptions. Then we create even more problems: we hurt the feelings of our loved ones if we assume wrong and we make them defensive if we accuse them.”

Jesus is calling us to greater self-awareness in his Kingdom. When we see our own sin as bigger, it changes the way we call out the sins of others. Imagine the impact this could have on the way we address our children—especially the ones who happen to have inherited our own temperament with its accompanying sin tendencies.

Jesus is calling us to greater self-awareness in his Kingdom. When we see our own sin as bigger, it changes the way we call out the sins of others.

Nonjudgmental Discernment

One of the most heinous misuses of Matthew 7 is the notion that all judgment is wrong.
“You do you, and I’ll do me, thank you very much. Keep your opinions to yourself.”

As mothers, we are called to meddle in our children’s affairs for as long as they are still children. (Obviously, things change when they become adults…)

Jesus calls us to utilize our mental sifting capabilities in the verse that immediately follows the log and speck passage:

“Do not give dogs what is holy, and do not throw your pearls before pigs, lest they trample them underfoot and turn to attack you.”

Matthew 7:6

How can we know when we’re dealing with a “dog” or a “pig” without making a judgment?
We can’t.
And this is why parenting is not for cowards. We are called to nonjudgmental discernment.
Christian parents will always be striving for balance between desiring holiness and wisdom for our children and holding ourselves to a Jesus-like compassion for their shortcomings and character flaws.

Like everything else we’ve talked about in the Sermon on the Mount up to this point, it all comes back to motive. As a mother, criticism can never be a spectator sport. We are active participants in the character development of our children.

And so we ask ourselves:
When I’m addressing sin with one of my children, am I interested in restoration and redemption?
Or does my correction always reek of condemnation, rejection, and self-elevation?

Praying Together

Lord, you know all about the big and blinding logs that obstruct our vision as parents. And yet you have given us the responsibility for training our children in righteousness, so we ask you to partner with us in “taking the log out of our own eye,” in banishing our Pharisaical tendencies. Help us to exercise loving discernment rather than harsh judgment.

As mothers, we have received your forgiveness and your pronouncement of freedom: “No condemnation!” May we demonstrate the extent to which we have understood that forbearance in the way we respond to the sins of our husbands, our children, and our brothers and sisters in Christ.

Amen

Let’s continue this conversation:

  • Do you have a “mini-me” in your family whose sin tendencies or habits drive you crazy?
  • Have you ever been judged or condemned unfairly?
  • Are you walking around in the awareness that you are mightily loved (warts and all) by the God who forgives and forbears in perfect, nonjudgmental love?

Holding You in the Light,

Christian parents strive for balance between desiring holiness and wisdom for our children and holding ourselves to a Jesus-like compassion for their shortcomings and character flaws. And this is why parenting is not for cowards.

This is part seven of a series about Jesus’s Sermon on the Mount. You’ll find part one on the Beatitudes HERE, and part two on Salt and Light HEREIn week three, in light of Jesus’s warning to teachers, we wondered what motivates teachers to take on the heavy responsibility of communicating the truth. Then, in part four, Jesus answers the question, “What does it really mean to be righteous?” Part five carries Jesus’s warning to believers about the subtle pull of public displays of righteousness, and part six explores the connection Jesus makes between our culture’s pervasive anxiety and our attachment to our “stuff.”

I invite you to join me each Sunday for the next few weeks as we sit under the teaching of Jesus together and consider how his words and his life should be impacting the way we live, work, think, and pray.

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28 thoughts on “Parents, Have You Found The Balance Between Judgment And Compassion?”

  1. You are an exceptional writer! You cut right to the heart of the matter, never excusing yourself in the process. So glad I found your blog.

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  2. Thanks for the mention and quote! I don’t know how many times as a parent, when I corrected my children, it was as if God was tapping my shoulder saying, “Are you listening to your words as well?” Next to reading the Bible and listening to sermons, I think parenting exposed some of my wonky attitudes more than anything else.

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    1. Your post showed up while I was in the very early process of writing mine, and it was a gift for helping me to sift through the thoughts I was gathering from Jesus’s Sermon on the Mount. So thank YOU!
      And YES! Parenting certainly has been (and continues to be) the same for me.

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  3. I had a tough time finding a balance as a parent. My mother was very domineering, and expected me to continue doing things the way she did. My husband, on the other hand, had been raised differently, and though he had expectations for obedience and respect, he had a way of communicating and dealing with our daughters that managed to achieve that goal. I was caught in a double bind, and needless to say have spent a lot of time in prayer and counseling over it, rest my mother’s soul. I can’t go back, but I have definitely adjusted my sails as our daughters have achieved adulthood and one is a parent herself now. I have the privilege of caring for our granddaughter and am mindful that the words you wrote here apply to grandparenting too. Thankful I found this in my inbox this morning!
    I also use the YouVersion app and was excited to see you have plans published there. Subscribing immediately! Thank you for sharing!

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    1. I’m definitely regrouping in this newer phase of life as a grandparent. Like you, I want to do it in light of all that I learned in the first go round.
      And thanks for your interest and support over at YouVersion. I will tell you that I just last week submitted files for a short series entitled “What Does the Bible Say About Anxiety,” so be on the lookout for another devotional!

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  4. It is truly a balance in parenting I have found challenging 🙂 I so appreciate the wisdom both you and Barbara share. We may all be in the same stages of life but you both have a wisdom I have come to appreciate, respect, and learn from.

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  5. It’s like how we’ve been told, “If you cannot say it with kindness, you probably shouldn’t say it”. It also helps to stop and check and motives before pointing out those specks. Thanks for this reminder. Many blessings.

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  6. Praise God for the salve of forgiveness! Kids can be more gracious than the adults. I once heard seminary-professor and author Howard Hendricks tell the story of a time when he blamed and even punished one of his four children, who turned out NOT to be the guilty one! When Howard apologized the boy said, “That’s OK Dad. We all make mistakes!” Oh to be as accommodating and kindhearted as that child!

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      1. Though I never met Dr. Hendricks, he was an important influence on my parenting in the early years. We owned a tape series on the Christian home that he had produced, which I must have listened to 3-4 times. Such wonderful wisdom and memorable stories–like the one above!

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