Sentences with phrase «passing moral judgment»

Dirty Tackle will tell you everything you need to know about the world of football while dropping the occasional life lesson and passing moral judgment on your wretched existence Frequency about 3 posts per month.
Instead of passing moral judgment from the perspective of an outsider, the therapist must learn to follow and respect the rhyme and reason of the emotional brain as well.
We can enforce boundaries without making assumptions or passing moral judgment.
Second, by passing moral judgment so ostentatiously, the blogger is putting himself above the man he is condemning, and I think you shouldn't pass judgment on (say) Kingsley Amis's curmudgeonly prejudices unless you can plausibly claim to have a tenth of his literary talent.
Nevertheless, both are devoted to the personal vocation of man, though under different titles... [Yet] at all times and in all places, the Church should have the true freedom to teach the faith, to proclaim its teaching about society, to carry out its task among men without hindrance, and to pass moral judgment even in matters relating to politics whenever the fundamental rights of man or the salvation of souls requires it» (Gaudium et Spes, 76).
Yet if we say that they have been «deceived» or are «mistaken» or have been indoctrinated by «false» ideas, then we are passing moral judgments, and the moment we do that we are implying that there are standards of good and evil.
Under professional duty journalists pass moral judgment of the phenomena involved in the public interest on behalf of society.
(paras. 1, 2 - 7) In January 2017, Judge Danièle Tremblay - Lamer dismissed the application, stating that «[t] he role of the Court is not to pass moral judgment on the Minister's decision to issue the export permits but only to make sure of the legality of such a decision».

Not exact matches

We risk handing to corporations a very potent weapon if we arm them with the moral license to pass judgment on our off - the - job behaviour.
Their value can only be ascertained by spiritual judgments directly passed upon them, judgments based on our own immediate feeling primarily; and secondarily on what we can ascertain of their experiential relations to our moral needs and to the rest of what we hold as true.
Indeed, the Christian who bets that God is dead must recognize that he himself has not yet passed through the death of God at whatever point he clings to moral law and judgment.
In fact, the pressure not to apply moral standards is more likely to produce an ethic of indifference, not one of true tolerance — as young people learn not to pass judgment on all kinds of horrendous practices, especially when they are nonwestern.
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