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.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

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.
ANECDOTE

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.
INSIGHT

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.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app