A lot of people think that John 3:16 is the most ubiquitous
and well-known verse in the Bible.
I disagree. It may be
the most well-known Bible reference, but in spirit I believe there is one that
is far more ingrained in the minds of mankind.
Check this out…
Matthew 7:1 “Judge not, that you be not judged” ESV
Every human knows this. Heck, dogs probably know this. We just can’t hear them in their minds saying, “Don’t judge
me, okay. The cat did it. Okay? You don’t know me. Don’t act like you know me.” If an atheist knows ONE verse it is this one. It is everyone’s way of saying, “How
dare you point out my sin to me!”
There are two Biblical definitions of the word, judge. One is to discern. The other is to condemn.
We know that we are supposed to admonish
one another, that discernment is good. We will know one another by our fruit. Yes? The idea that Jesus
was saying, “Don’t see other people’s sin ever. If someone is stealing something, just let it go. If your loved one is showing
destructive patterns, how dare you admonish them. How dare you reveal what you see that they might stop.” We all deep down know this. None of us live out the opposite
either. We all say something when
we see our loved one about to put their hand into the fire. We all say, “Stop!” To let that person touch the fire
unwarned is not even remotely loving.
No one let’s their kid wonder into the street for fear of judgment, nor
allows their kid to keep lying.
Both are very dangerous, and to leave it to that person to just figure
it out is silly, and no one does that.
We all share what we’ve learned, and discernment is part of that.
So what is the issue if it isn’t discernment?
Condemnation.
One of the greatest pieces of wisdom outside the Bible I’ve
ever read was on the difference between condemnation and conviction. Both sting at first. Being told we are wrong ALWAYS
hurts. It is a practiced
skill and sign of maturity to get better at hearing that you are wrong. The difference is that conviction
always promises life, and there is a sweetness behind it. It is about freedom. There is now therefore no condemnation
in Christ Jesus. We are free. However, sin hurts, and we need to be shown from time to time that we are hurting ourselves. On the other hand, condemnation brings
about death. It keeps us trapped
in our sin, focused on the past.
It is a tool of satan.
Until this last year, I had never really felt the sting of
condemnation so heavily, nor seen how destructive it can be. It makes since to me now as I read that
the number one reason for the rise of the “Nones,” those no longer affiliated
with any church, is judgment. I
don’t think I ever really saw that judgment goes beyond words. It isn’t just proclaiming, “You are
going to hell.” It is a posture of
the heart and spirit, one that overflows into our actions.
A year ago my wife left me. I have no desire to go into detail. I have worked hard to preserve a relationship
of some kind, however trivial, with my ex-wife. All I care to say is that I did not deserve to be left. She had no Biblical right to leave me. I did not want her to leave. I did not want to be divorced. Beyond that, I am not going to say
much.
Since then, I have
experienced a whole new side to the church I have never before known. Note that when I say church, I mean the
church greater, the body of believers, not one church in specific. What I have experienced is judgment,
and hear this, it has hurt me worse than I can possibly admit. There just are not words.
As I said, I have learned much about judgment. Let me go back to what condemnation is
versus discernment. The main
element of condemnation is not speaking words to people. That is the overflow. It is in the heart. In order to judge someone in the verb
sense you must first become a judge the noun. In order to become a judge you are placing yourself as a
dispenser of the law. Think about
that. It is an act of
self-elevation. One doesn’t have
to elevate to be a part of admonishing and conviction. Who better than a former thief, or someone who still even battles the desire to steal to tell see the pattern in another thief and say, "Don't do it. I know. This road only leads to pain." Is not the lustful man or woman the most qualified to warn of the false promises lust brings? It surely is. Notice that the fellow criminal is still aware of the law. There is an acute awareness, a discernment, of the law and can see when someone else is breaking it, and still warns to obey it. I say that to again show that discernment and admonishment are not bad.
I want you to think about this... Being judged, condemned, has given satan so much power for
lies in my heart it is amazing. I have never
felt so useless, so unloved, or so dirty in my life, and I wasn’t even the one
who left. I was
wronged, and yet I have been made to feel like dirt, like I am not pure, not
true, not a real Christian anymore. I have become a second-class Christian.
Ultimately, that feeling is my own fault. No one controls my heart. These are lies that I have believed. That is on me. I should have been stronger, more
faithful. How many times has the
Holy Spirit reminded me that Jesus was an outcast by the religious institutions
of the day? Many.
Yet, I have struggled like never
before, and in doing so I now see the power of condemnation. If I, someone who has devoted their
life to Christ, has struggled so mightily under the burden of condemnation from
the church then what effect does it have on someone just peeking through the
door? We already know the
answer. Unfortunately, sometimes
you just have to experience something to really understand it. I never understood how I could condemn
people with my actions, with my looks, with my posture. I never saw how my feeling like I was
better than someone would pervade through my mask and show in a hundred little
ways, or come back around through gossip.
How many times have I heard mean things said about me by my brothers and
sisters in Christ. Even an
amplified sense of pity can be a part of it.
I realize there are a ton of trails and loose ends to be
discussed in this. For now, I just
want you to meditate on the devastation a spirit of condemnation has. Even though I have suffered it’s
burden, I still struggle to not think myself better than others, to go beyond
lovingly and gently calling someone out, and instead wreak havoc upon them,
making them feel awful and unloved.
Perhaps that is the key.
Perhaps we forget that Jesus loved us BEFORE we were clean, BEFORE we
loved Him. Yes? Maybe? We too ought to love others BEFORE they become clean, as we are not clean either, really, not in action. That is the beauty of the gospel, to be seen as clean when we are not. God takes those weights and measurements of judgment and tosses them away.
The counteraction to this has been the redemptive, the
restorative, the understanding love of so many others. It has been through the tenderness of
those who have not condemned (but have sometimes admonished). They gave counsel. They hurt with me. They reminded me that I am not somehow
less of a person, that divorce is not a super sin, that it doesn’t define
me. I may be someone has been
divorced, but that doesn’t make my definition the divorced guy. It is not my label for life. I am the redeemed guy, the Christian, the mess of a man made Holy only by grace, the guy that keeps screwing up and keeps getting taken care of by Jesus anyway.
They helped me move past my own
condemnation of myself. It is
amazing how when people start to treat you a certain way you struggle not to
feel that way. It is through the
guidance of others I am reminded that I did not do wrong. I didn’t leave, that you can’t make
someone else obey, or love you. I
have been reminded constantly that good parents have children go astray, good
spouses get left, and good people suffer.
Job was innocent yet suffered.
I remember Tim Skaggs, senior pastor at Coggin Avenue Baptist in
Brownwood reminding me that Jesus stood outside of Jerusalem and wept because
he had called them to Him and they would not come, that if Jesus couldn’t make
them come how could I believe I could make Kathleen come to me? I couldn’t. We as the church can help or hinder so much.
My prayer is that we can all see
ourselves as we are, sinners redeemed by God. May we not condemn. May we not remember we are fellow criminals all coming together in praise of the fact that the actual judge decided to let us go free despite our criminal action. May we not make a mockery of the court, and as criminals, climb into that judges chair, grab the gavel, and start waiving at the other criminals just like us, lest we be held in contempt of court. All glory be to God. Amen.
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