Quotes about Judgment
I stood and pulled her up on two feet. "That depends." "On what?" "Whether you're looking at this through my eyes or yours.
— Charles Martin
By your words you'll be acquitted, and by your words you'll be condemned.
— Charles Martin
I'm only going to stand before God and give an account for my life, not for somebody else's life. If I have a bad attitude, then I need to say there's no point in me blaming you for what's wrong in my life.
— Joyce Meyer
Such a person can see without "pre-judice", that is, without judging in advance; he will judge only on the basis of what he has really seen for himself.
— Hans Urs von Balthasar
I will criticize individuals when they deserve criticism, but I will not condemn entire populations. We have seen where that leads.
— Harold S. Kushner
It's hard to think seriously about grace until you understand that you've failed morally and will someday stand accountable before a holy God.
— Lee Strobel
But C. S. Lewis made the point that we hate sin but love the sinner all the time — in our own lives. In other words, when we're judging ourselves, we always love the sinner despite our sin. We accept ourselves, even though we might not always like our behavior.
— Lee Strobel
Satan greets people in hell by saying: "You'll find that there's no right or wrong here—just what works for you.
— Lee Strobel
Let go. Why do you cling to pain? There is nothing you can do about the wrongs of yesterday. It is not yours to judge. Why hold on to the very thing which keeps you from hope and love?
— Leo Buscaglia
Have you ever wondered what a church full of Pharisees would be like? 1. They would all attend every service 2. They would all tithe 3. They would all work in the church 4. They would all go to hell.
— Adrian Rogers
The more conscious I am of the work God has yet to do in me, the less critical I am about what he has yet to do in you
— Andy Stanley
The ironic thing about legalism is that it not only doesn't make people work harder, it makes them give up. Moralism doesn't produce morality; rather, it produces immorality.
— Tullian Tchividjian