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To Judge or Not to Judge
"Judge not, that ye be not
judged" (Ma. 7:1).
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said, "Judge not
that ye be not judged;" yet, on the other hand, he also said, "Judge not
according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment" (Jn. 7:24). And of course,
this seeming contradiction gets us right into the question of when to judge and when not
to; what to judge and what not to.
Let us begin with some of the older definitions of judging.
Going to the Hebrew, judging means, first of all, "to rule" and then "to
judge." That is to say that a man cannot rule unless he also judges. Such it was with
Moses who ruled by judging, as also did the judges of the Old Testament.
The Greek word krino, to judge, relates to the root of the
Latin word cerno, meaning to sunder, or to part, or to sift. Judging, then, always
involves a careful separation of the good from the evil, of the right from the wrong.
So, it is inevitable that we must have judges, and that
there is a place for judging. This has always been part of the rule of God under the Old
Testament and the New Testament covenants.
Therefore, Paul admonishes the Christians not to use the
secular legal system to settle their differences but rather to make the church a court of
law by saying:
Dare any of you, having a matter against another, go
to law before the unjust, and not before the saints? Do ye not know that the saints shall
judge the world?And if the world shall be judged by you, are ye unworthy to judge the
smallest matters? Know ye not that we shall judge angels? How much more things that
pertain to this life?... I speak to your shame. Is it so, that there is not a wise man
among you?No, not one that shall be able to judge between his brethren?" (1 Co.
6:1-3,5).
Now, let us consider more specifically how judging fits
into the Christian life.
I. We All Are to Judge, to Distinguish Good
from Evil.
I mention this first because this is the foundation of all
Christian judgment. We, for example, must judge what is wheat and what is chaff, what is
light and what is darkness, what will help and what will hinder, and who to have
fellowship with and who to avoid (2 Th. 3:6).
We do this judging by the Word of God, by the inner witness
of the Holy Spirit, or by the gift of discernment, which is a special gift for judging
righteous judgment. This kind of universal judging primarily relates how we are to react
to people and circumstances.
Then there is another kind of judging that goes beyond our
own good. It is the judging of others unto correction. We must realize that we cannot
correct anyone until we have first made a judgment on what needs to be corrected.
II. We Are Entitled to Judge Others in a
Teacher/Student Relationship
If We Are the Teacher.
The most basic teacher/student relationship is that between
a parent and a child. A parent must judge the childs behavior, for without judging
such behavior, the parent cannot rule his house successfully. Indeed, a parent is to apply
the law of God to the child and, if necessary, even with the rod of correction (Pr.
22:15). A parent is Gods proxy lawgiver in the home.
Again, remember, the ruling and the judging go together.
One cannot rule without judging, and one cannot be a rightful judge unless appointed to
that office.
Another teacher/student relationship is that of the
classroom, all the way from grammar school through university training. The teacher has a
license to judge. And so it is also true of the workplace where no employer can
successfully operate a business without dealing with the faults and weaknesses of his
employees.
Finally, there is the pastor/parishioner relationship. This
is also a teacher/student relationship. The pastor is Gods appointed ruler, and he
is admonished to "reprove and rebuke" for the perfecting of the saints (2 Ti.
4:2; 3:16-17; He. 13:7).
III. We Are Entitled to Judge Others When
We Are in a Teacher/Teacher Relationship.
When there is a transfer of a student from one teacher to
another, for example, it is appropriate to for the old teacher to relate to the new one
the weaknesses and the strengths of that student. This is done in the school system, and
it is done in the workplace by "character references" which include past job
performance and summaries of the persons strengths and weaknesses. And it also ought
to be done when a parishioner moves from one parish to another. In this case, it is wise
for the new pastor or church to ask for references from the former pastor before placing
the new members in leadership. When this is not done, pastors may put new members into
positions of leadership for which they are not qualified. The consequences could be
serious.
Other than when you are in a teacher/student relationship
or a teacher/teacher relationship, there is only one more position from which you as a
Christian can judge another Christian, and that is from the point of Christian perfection.
IV. We May Judge and Correct Others if We Have Obtained
Moral Perfection.
This is the message of Jesus "judgment
passage" in his Sermon on the Mount (Ma. 7:1-5). Although this passage begins with
"Judge not...," it ends by saying that once you have cleaned up your house, then
you may help your brother to clean up his. If we judge other Christians, pointing out
their sins, weaknesses, and faults, when we still have our own, we are hypocrites.
However, if we judge fellow believers when we are in a
state of moral perfection, then we are as "little saviors." In Jesus
words, it reads like this, "Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own
eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brothers
eye" (v. 5).
Notice, again, the ultimate end of righteous judgment and
of this judgment passage is moral perfection. Judging other Christians with sin and bad
attitudes in our own lives, blinds us from making righteous judgments. If we go about
judging under those circumstances, we do no better than a blind man doing cataract surgery
on another persons eye. The more a saint is broken and the longer he has walked with
God, the more reluctant he will ever be to deal with the faults of others, knowing that he
also must appear before the judgment seat of Christ.
Now, let us see how Jesus judged.
The Morally Perfect
Cast Out the Mote in the Brothers
Eye with
Love, Compassion, and Hope.
When the adulterous woman was caught in the act of
adultery, there was only one clear Old Testament biblical answer to her misdeed: death by
stoning. Notice that the penalty was given to Moses by God. The Pharisees tried to get
Jesus to disagree with God, his Father. They thought they had Jesus in a corner. But Jesus
is not to be put into a corner. He came not to destroy the law but to fulfill the law.
Therefore, he said to the Pharisees: you caught her, and
you stone her--provided, of course, you dont have a beam or mote in your own eye! If
you dont, go ahead and do it. "He that is without sin among you, let him first
cast a stone at her" (Jn. 8:7).
Jesus permitted and consented to the stoning of this woman
provided the Pharisees hearts were pure. Well, they were not, and so they all left off
judging and condemning and finding fault with this woman, at least for the moment. Indeed,
they all found themselves to be hypocrites.
Now, if we are not truly holy, without sin, then should we
not also drop our stones and just walk away, and let those who have no sin
or who are in a leadership position deal with the problem?
Jesus, as the only one without sin, was left alone with the
woman. And what, my friend, did he do? He, the only one who had the right to judge, to
condemn, to find fault, and to criticize, leaned on compassion, love, and forgiveness; and
in that context, he removed the beam from her eye by saying to her, "...go and sin no
more" (v. 11).
Summing it all up: all of us are called to judge between
right and wrong, holy and unholy, so we can keep ourselves unspotted. Some of us are
placed in a position of judging in reference to ruling or governing. If we are in that
position, we must carefully (with discretion) fulfill our calling. If we are not called to
such a position of governing by divine right, the judging of other Christians should only
be from a pure heart without a speck in our own eye, without a stone in our hand, and with
great restraint and caution.
In the judgment passage, "Judge not..." are the
first words, but, lest we make "Judge not..." the Eleventh Commandment, Jesus
ends this passage with our need to be perfect so that we can, with righteous judgment,
help others toward perfection.
The next time you are about to judge, find fault, or
criticize, please think about all these things.