A heart contrite and humbled, O God, you will not spurn. Psalm 51:19

In his book, The Return of the Prodigal Son, Henri Nouwen suggests that one of the main things that has to happen in order for us to come to conversion and purity of heart is that we must move from being judge to being repentant sinner.

From judge to repentant sinner, what is being suggested here? Psalm 50 haunts the heart with the refrain: “A humbled and contrite heart you (God) will not spurn.” Our problem is that, despite considerable sincerity, our hearts are rarely humble and contrite. The norm is judgment of others, anger at them, and a certain moral smugness and self-righteousness.

Rarely are we on our knees with our heads against the breast of a forgiving God, contrite about what we’ve done and left undone—our betrayals, our sins, our inadequacies. Most of the time our posture is that of the judge. Our own faults are rarely at issue as we adjudicate others’ need for contrition and pronounce judgment on their faults.

Our own judgmental attitude and self-righteousness is, most of the time, hidden from us. In our own eyes we are never the hypocrite, the one sitting in judgment on somebody else’s life. No. We are the honest ones, the compassionate ones, the humble ones.

Strange how each of us so clearly sees the judgmental attitude in the other and yet is so unaware of how brutally judgmental we ourselves are. One man’s prophet is another man’s fanatic; one woman’s freedom fighter is another woman’s terrorist; and one person’s pro-life struggle is, for another person, the dealing of death!

What is true here in terms of the self-righteousness and self-blindness that exists within our ideological circles is perhaps even more true within the ordinary give and take of our daily lives. We are invariably judge, never repentant sinner.

Conversion begins when we stop standing as judge in order to kneel as sinner. When we are humble and contrite of heart we will not be spurned by God—nor by each other. [Excerpt from Ron Rolheiser’s “A Humbled Heart” November 1993]

Author: DV Dan

A lifelong seeker of truth and oneness with God, Daniel has journeyed through the rich and varied landscape of Christian denominations in search of a deeper understanding of what it truly means to be one with Christ. This search has been one of both heart and intellect—guided by a desire to know Christ more deeply and to live in communion with Him. Through a transformative study of the Gospel of John, particularly Chapter Six, which illuminated the mystery of the Paschal Sacrifice of Christ and revealed its living expression in the Catholic Church’s liturgical celebration of the Holy Eucharist, led to his movement from decades of Evangelical Christianity to full communion with the Catholic Church, where faith and worship converge in the sacrament of the altar. Daniel holds a Master’s Degree in Theological Studies from the University of Dallas.

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