Stop judging and you will not be judged.
Stop condemning and you will not be condemned.
We are often quick to judge, ready and waiting for an excuse to condemn others. We are more likely to assume the worst about the behavior of others. We are more ready to believe something was intentional, planned malice, rather than a momentary failure of self-control or a mistake. Even less do we bother imagine what sort of circumstances might make said behavior make sense. We do all this and then we come to expect that God has a similar bias toward us, that he is looking for an excuse to condemn us, waiting for any misstep of ours to send us to hell. We need to reevaluate, starting from the top down, learning to imitate God's merciful heart, rather than projecting our egotistical self-protective nature on him. We tend to judge others not for the sake of justice but to feel validated ourselves. But God has no such self-interested need, and is thus entirely free and available to show mercy.
Give and gifts will be given to you;
a good measure, packed together, shaken down, and overflowing,
will be poured into your lap.
It has been truly said that we can't outdo God in generosity. The more we willingly and readily forgive others the more we will experience the effects of his forgiveness in our own lives. The more we treat others merciful, as fallible creatures in need of grace, the more we ourselves will experience ourselves being treated by God in that way. As we ourselves act mercifully and forgive, we will experience the presence of God, the origin of all good and perfect gifts (see James 1:17), living and moving within us. There is no better gift than God himself.
We have sinned, been wicked and done evil;
we have rebelled and departed from your commandments and your laws.
Daniel himself had not done any of those things for which he plead guilty and asked God for mercy. But rather than asserting his own righteousness and judging others, he identified himself with them, pleaded for mercy for them as if for himself. It would have been easy for him to smugly look down on others while asking God to preserve only him. But he seemed to unite himself to the destiny of his people, such that he and they together would either receive the mercy for which he prayed, or else perish together. There was apparently no incentive to pray such a selfless prayer. But it was precisely through this prayer that massive blessings were unlocked not only for Israel, not only for subsequent generation, but even for Daniel himself, who grew closer to the Lord and became a type of Jesus by doing so.
Help us, O God our savior,
because of the glory of your name;
Deliver us and pardon our sins
for your name's sake.




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