
Become New with John Ortberg 25. Stop Condemning, Just Listen
Mar 2, 2026
A call to fast from harsh words and disarm our language during Lent. A clear definition of condemnation as malice plus disgust. A single, simple practice is offered that makes condemning others nearly impossible. Why we overestimate our listening and how strong emotions shut it down. Scripture and a listening checklist prompt curiosity instead of contempt.
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What Condemnation Really Is
- Condemnation is a toxic mix of ill will and disgust toward another person.
- John Ortberg defines it as wanting pain for someone plus finding them repulsive, distinguishing it from mere discernment or hurt feelings.
Stop Sign Story About Judging
- John Ortberg recounts being stopped by a police officer and jokingly saying "guilty, guilty, guilty."
- He uses the stop-sign interaction to illustrate differences in literal versus spiritual readings and to clarify condemnation versus judgment.
Distinguish Tone From Heart
- Tone and heart are distinct; a harsh tone can come from a good heart and a gentle tone can mask malice.
- Ortberg urges reading prophetic or jarring language as corrective rather than condemnatory, citing Isaiah and Jesus.



