I received this in a pastor's weekly devotional email this morning:
"In the course of his remarks, Bishop Walker made the point that we should not “judge people on their right now.” Rather, we should “judge them on their not yet.”I thought this was extremely well put. Just as we should take a plastic bottle and not see it littering the ocean but rather envision the shopping bag or park bench it can be so we should not condemn anyone for simply having difficulties just now. We should not judge the awkward, uncertain college student on their right now. We should look at them and see the confident, mature individual they will become. We should not look at the disheveled and angry addict and condemn them to that state of being for the rest of their lives. We should look at them and see the sober, productive individual they will be after they change. When we join in our prayer of confession every week we should not resign ourselves to being the fallen, sinful person we know we are. We should look ahead and celebrate the free, forgiven person God is going to make us.Let us thank God that God does not judge us on our right now. God knows we are fallen and need saving. God judges us on what we will be: holy children of God sitting around the banquet table in the eternal kingdom. And then God treats as if our not yet were already right now.Thanks be to God we are not condemned to our right now. And let us help others reach their not yet."
Even as I appreciated their wisdom, I had some reservations about these words. I often (though not as often as I should...) pray to see people as Jesus sees them. Jesus sees who we really are-- who we were created to be. Yet, Jesus sees who we really are right now, too. It's true that he does not judge that state we're in, but he does not deny it, either. The reason for my squirming, I suppose, is that I just don't want us to hop out of the mess too quickly.
I don't want us to console ourselves only with airbrushed, sanctified versions of the not-yet. We don't ever need to judge, but we do need to make decisions. All our decisions have to wade through both the now and the not-yet-- of other people, of our world, and of ourselves. And so I do not tell myself, "Okay, I would be able to speak more kindly to this guy if he had the means and motivation to wash his hair" -- but I tell myself that Jesus speaks tenderly to those without homes and hygiene.
We don't celebrate or worship who we (or those around us) are becoming, but we are filled with awe at the One who can make it so -- who can forgive and transform us into the men and women who will bring God honor and praise. Thank God our identity is not how we present ourselves, but who You say we are. How You love us. How you transform us. Our identity is being your disciples, your little children, your beloved.
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