DEVOTION, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
19, 2012
“A mistake we make”
BY
PASTOR BOB COY
“Judge not, that you be not judged.” —Matthew 7:1
(NKJV)
It’s one of the most familiar passages in the Bible. Even
people who rarely read the Bible know the warning Jesus gave: “Judge not, that
you be not judged.” But in addition to being one of the most familiar passages
in Scripture, it’s also one of the most misunderstood.
What exactly is Jesus warning us about here? Here’s what
He’s not warning us about: exercising judgment. We know that because in this
very same chapter He goes on to warn us about false prophets and tells us to
examine the fruit of their lives and then discern whether they are speaking the
truth (Matthew 7:15-20). So the Lord does expect us to discern and make
judgments when the occasion calls for it.
But the warning here, “Judge not,” speaks to something
different. When you read a little further, you recognize that Jesus isn’t
prohibiting us from exercising judgment. He’s telling us how we’re to exercise
judgment. He does so by sharing a parable of someone who has a beam of wood in
his eye yet is intent on pointing out a speck of sawdust in someone else’s eye
(Matthew 7:3-5). It’s a comical yet powerful picture of the mistake we make
when we exercise judgment.
Oftentimes we are quick to see problems in another’s life,
but we’re blind to the glaring sins in our own. In essence, Jesus is warning us
against focusing on the problems of others without first dealing with our own.
Judgment needs to start with us. We need to examine our own heart before we
make any attempt to examine anyone else’s heart. And when we do, we often find
we’re guilty of the very things we’re quick to criticize in others, which opens
the way for confession and cleansing.
There is a time for us to exercise judgment, but it’s
always after we exercise it on ourselves.
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