The Bible’s command that we not judge others does not mean we cannot
show discernment. Immediately after Jesus says, “Do not judge,” He says,
“Do not give dogs what is sacred; do not throw your pearls to pigs” (Matthew 7:6).
A little later in the same sermon, He says, “Watch out for false
prophets. . . . By their fruit you will recognize them” (verses 15–16).
How are we to discern who are the “dogs” and “pigs” and “false prophets”
unless we have the ability to make a judgment call on doctrines and
deeds? Jesus is giving us permission to tell right from wrong.
Also, the Bible’s command that we not judge others does not mean all
actions are equally moral or that truth is relative. The Bible clearly
teaches that truth is objective, eternal, and inseparable from God’s
character. Anything that contradicts the truth is a lie—but, of course,
to call something a “lie” is to pass judgment. To call adultery or
murder a sin is likewise to pass judgment—but it’s also to agree with
God. When Jesus said not to judge others, He did not mean that no one
can identify sin for what it is, based on God’s definition of sin.
And the Bible’s command that we not judge others does not mean there
should be no mechanism for dealing with sin. The Bible has a whole book
entitled Judges. The judges in the Old Testament were raised up by God Himself (Judges 2:18).
The modern judicial system, including its judges, is a necessary part
of society. In saying, “Do not judge,” Jesus was not saying, “Anything
goes.”
Elsewhere, Jesus gives a direct command to judge: “Stop judging by mere appearances, but instead judge correctly” (John 7:24).
Here we have a clue as to the right type of judgment versus the wrong
type. Taking this verse and some others, we can put together a
description of the sinful type of judgment:
Superficial judgment is wrong. Passing judgment on someone based solely on appearances is sinful (John 7:24). It is foolish to jump to conclusions before investigating the facts (Proverbs 18:13). Simon the Pharisee
passed judgment on a woman based on her appearance and reputation, but
he could not see that the woman had been forgiven; Simon thus drew
Jesus’ rebuke for his unrighteous judgment (Luke 7:36–50).
Hypocritical judgment is wrong. Jesus’ command not to judge others in Matthew 7:1 is preceded by comparisons to hypocrites (Matthew 6:2, 5, 16) and followed by a warning against hypocrisy (Matthew 7:3–5). When we point out the sin of others while we ourselves commit the same sin, we condemn ourselves (Romans 2:1).
Harsh, unforgiving judgment is wrong. We are “always to be gentle toward everyone” (Titus 3:2). It is the merciful who will be shown mercy (Matthew 5:7),
and, as Jesus warned, “In the same way you judge others, you will be
judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you” (Matthew 7:2).
Self-righteous judgment is wrong. We are called to humility, and “God opposes the proud” (James 4:6). The Pharisee in Jesus’ parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector
was confident in his own righteousness and from that proud position
judged the publican; however, God sees the heart and refused to forgive
the Pharisee’s sin (Luke 18:9–14).
Untrue judgment is wrong. The Bible clearly forbids bearing false witness (Proverbs 19:5). “Slander no one” (Titus 3:2).
Christians are often accused of “judging” or intolerance when they speak
out against sin. But opposing sin is not wrong. Holding aloft the
standard of righteousness naturally defines unrighteousness and draws
the slings and arrows of those who choose sin over godliness. John the Baptist incurred the ire of Herodias when he spoke out against her adultery with Herod (Mark 6:18–19). She eventually silenced John, but she could not silence the truth (Isaiah 40:8).
Believers are warned against judging others unfairly or unrighteously, but Jesus commends “right judgment” (John 7:24, ESV). We are to be discerning (Colossians 1:9; 1 Thessalonians 5:21). We are to preach the whole counsel of God, including the Bible’s teaching on sin (Acts 20:27; 2 Timothy 4:2). We are to gently confront erring brothers or sisters in Christ (Galatians 6:1). We are to practice church discipline (Matthew 18:15–17). We are to speak the truth in love (Ephesians 4:15). ( Crd: https: //www.gotquestions.org)
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Tuesday, April 12, 2022
What does the Bible mean when it says, “Do not judge”?
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ထမြောက်ခြင်း RESURRECTION နှင်. တရားစီရင်ခြင်း
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ဒီနေ. Yangon UG တွေနဲ့ Mandalay UG တွေကို အပြင်းအထန် ဖမ်းဆီး နှိပ်ကွပ်ဖို့ အနုပညာရှင်တွေကို လွှတ်ပေးပြီး သတင်းအမှောင် ချတာပါ။ ချင်းပြည်-ဖလ...
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