You may find the following to be of interest:
"I wish to follow up on our lesson of last week and your assignment having to do with judgment, for it was not a frivolous exercise that I asked you to
observe in your life, the phenomenon of judgment and of control.
I will ask you now if you were conscientious in identifying when it was
that you judged or when you thought you were being judged. [I will ask
you] to now, in your mind's eye, picture yourself with both hands up.
And what does this connote to you? It connotes a different status, as if
you had been burgled, or, in the cowboy pictures when they say, "stick
'em up." And with both hands in the air you are in a defensive mode, you
have become a victim of attacks of judgment, and if all of you were to
walk around with your hands over your head most of the time, how can we
expect to accomplish anything? And yet most mortals do this as a matter
of course. You cannot shake hands, you cannot embrace, as long as your
hands are up in the air defending yourself against life itself.
There is a phrase, a quote from the Life and Teachings of Jesus that
suggests "resist not evil" and it is to this lesson that the analogy is
given, for in judgment - in giving judgment and in assuming judgment
upon yourself - (from others or from yourself) - you have resisted evil.
You have defended yourself against it. You have reacted to it. You have
retaliated in kind, and it consumes far too much of life. And so, in
regard to judgment, dear children, I would ask you to peruse your
understanding now of judgment and remind yourself to resist not evil. Be
aware of the inherent risk of judgment towards others and towards
yourself, but do not allow it to be a life style. Rather, let it pass
you by.
Accept the fact that infinity lies ahead but the finite creature is a
conglomeration of societal conditionings, and judgment is an unfortunate
part thereof. In seeking souls for the kingdom, judge not, for God
himself is no respecter of persons, and it is to this that I address my
words, you who have been born of the spirit, who have gone beyond the
realm wherein you need to judge, for you understand that judgment is
only done by those qualified to see the entire picture, and as you pass
through your life, you cannot see the whole picture, you cannot even see
your whole self, much less the whole of another.
And so remember to resist not evil when you see it, but understand that
as you are all imperfect, "this too shall pass." Go on, then, to what is
acceptable in your sight and that which you can have unity and a benign
relationship with and for. "