This topic has
been weighing on my heart for a little while and I do think it’s important.
Many people may not agree with me; some religious types may even get upset with
me should they read this, but I don’t care. I’m just going to tell you what I
think, and why, based on the scriptures of the Bible. You don’t have to agree
with me, just know where I stand on this topic: judging.
Now, I should
clarify first what I mean by the word, ‘judge.’ Many people feel put upon and
unfairly treated when someone calls them on the carpet for something they’re
doing wrong. ‘Don’t judge me,’ they’ll say, ‘the Bible says you’re not supposed
to judge!’ Many people who claim the Bible in such a way don’t even read it.
They have just heard the smallest snippets of scripture such as, ‘judge not
lest you be judged.’
But the Bible
does teach about how we ought to judge things and people, not in a critical or
self-righteous way, but according to the teachings of Christ. A lot of
self-proclaimed Christians don’t even know what Christ taught, which makes them
a living contradiction. In those cases where we actually need to judge
something (hopefully those cases are few) we need to lean on the teachings of
Christ which can be found in the Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) of the
Bible as well as the various epistles written by his disciples, so that we may
judge properly according to what pleases God.
And let me
clarify concerning criticism. Being critical of people is a form a judging.
People who are familiar with the context of ‘judge not lest you be judged’ are well
aware of this and I’ll explain it more later on.
One of the main
things to keep in mind (possibly THE main thing) aside from ‘learn what Christ
taught,’ to be able to judge as a proper Christian should, is ‘don’t be a
hypocrite.’ There were many examples of hypocrisy in Jesus’ day, most of them
were called Pharisees. Jesus railed on them more than once for being
hypocrites, and he warned his disciples against the ‘leaven’ of the Pharisees,
which is a reference to their doctrine (or at least some part of it) which was hypocrisy.
The Pharisees (as
well as the Sadducees) were hypocrites in that they burdened the people under
them with all the laws, traditions, customs, and standards of Judaism while
they themselves were lazy and ungrateful (those two tend to go together)
putting forth less effort and suffering less for the sake of the law than the
people they had rule over. No wonder Jesus called them a generation of vipers
(remember that serpents are not generally spoken of kindly in the Bible). The
Pharisees often took the laws of Moses, which were burdensome enough as they
were, and added even more to them, creating oppression for the Jewish people.
They also came up with traditions and customs which contradicted Moses’ Law and
served no one but the Pharisees themselves. And as if that weren’t enough,
Moses himself had to create laws for the Jews (not just the Pharisees) the only
reason for which was, as Jesus put it, ‘because your hearts were hard.’ Aw, man…
that’s bad.
And even after
Jesus taught a new law, one that would suffice for those who kept tender hearts
before the Lord, there were people (more Jews) who not only wanted the
Christians of the early church to follow the teachings of Christ, but also all
of the Jewish laws, customs, traditions, etc. which they had been taught to
follow their whole lives. This of course was what they whined about after they
started sharing the gospel of Jesus with the Gentiles (the non-Jewish) and they
never really stopped causing trouble for it either.
Paul and the
other ministers discussed this matter and concluded that following the old laws
of Moses was not needed to fulfill the teachings of Christ and so the Gentiles of
the Christian church were not compelled to do so.
Today, however, I
can see that many churches, professing to be Christian, do not follow this
pattern; they take the teachings of Christ, often misusing them, misunderstanding
them, and sometimes just missing them altogether, before adding a bunch of
traditions, standards, customs, rituals, etc. which they say a member of their
church must follow or else be ostracized from the group. This, as unfortunate
as it is, seems to be a constant with the nature of mankind: unless you do
things my/our way, you can’t be a part of us.
Of course, Jesus
said things very similar, but his way is a perfect way that leads to eternal
life and happiness. Others may try to make a similar claim about their groups
and about their methods and about their doctrines, but Jesus is truly the only
way, because his is the way that comes straight from God Himself.
In the world, as
we see it today, especially in America, we see people trying to win moral and
social arguments based on liberalism vs. conservatism, or even try to find a
balance between the two, whether it be in politics, or the church, or some
other area of life. The truth is, however, that you can miss God just as easily
on either side or both sides. You can also get a hold of God on either or both sides.
God is the point; He sent His only-begotten son, Jesus, to show us the way to
find Him.
When we don’t get
God, we get something else. If we miss God on the side of liberalism, we allow earthly
and wicked worldliness into our lives and into our hearts; and if we miss God
on the side of conservatism, we’ll still usher in that same worldliness, only
now it’ll dress itself up with religiosity and self-righteousness.
The point is that
we should want God, and God does not want His people to be worldly. Truly, God’s
people are full of love, meek, godly, righteous, pure, and clean in their
hearts.
Of course, many
churches, even the truly good ones, may have certain standards and even certain
rituals. Good people know how to use such things to guard their hearts against
sin.
For example: a
good approach to drinking may be to not drink anything ever, because that way
you can’t possibly get drunk.
Being so
irresponsible that you actually allow yourself to get drunk is a sin; it says
so in the Bible in a number of places (read it yourself) however the teachings
of Christ never say that you can’t have any alcohol at all. Drink without
getting drunk (a ‘know your limit, drink within it’ kind of a thing).
Now a bad
example: so many people in religion today boycott alcohol with such a militant
and proud attitude, that they actually will teach their standard against
alcohol as if it were a doctrine of Christ himself, that if you drink alcohol,
you actually have sinned (which isn’t Biblical) and you can’t be a part of the
Body of Christ (which is absurd; Jesus won’t refuse you if you occasionally have
a glass of wine or a beer).
Such standards
should be encouraged, absolutely, to help people stay away from sin. But even
without them, if you follow the teachings of Christ found in the Gospels and
the epistles of the apostles, you will not sin.
The best way, of
course, to know if someone’s stance and standard against sin is Biblical (and
Christian), is to read the Bible and learn the teachings of Christ for yourself.
Nowhere does
Jesus say you can never ever drink, and nowhere does Jesus teach that God is actually
impressed when you are dressed to the nines for Sunday service (I guess it’s
better than you showing up in your underwear or PJs, but somehow I’m not
worried).
Jesus does teach
to help the needy and give to the poor, Jesus does say that you need to
practice forgiveness or else God won’t forgive you (Does that mean you have to
forgive all those annoying religious pinheads who say that you have to do such
and such which are not in the teachings of Christ? YES), and Jesus does teach
quite a bit actually about moral living before you even read as far as the
epistles.
One key thing I’ll
give you here is the knowledge that God’s concern is with your heart. If you
can’t, with a clean conscience, go to church without dressing up first, then
get dressed up. But, for Christ’s sake (and I mean that literally), don’t
impose such things of YOUR faith onto others. It will very likely engender
bitterness, angst, hatred, and dispassion for God and his saints and that
poison in their hearts will be on YOUR head.
If you are genuinely
concerned for others’ salvation, don’t look at the petty things they do and the
habits they have that don’t mean anything in the light of the faith we have in
the gospel of Jesus Christ. Look at their behavior; those who are truly ‘presenting
their bodies a living sacrifice unto God’ won’t be able to hide the fact of it.
They worship with their hands raised (hands are hard to fake) and their voice
actually making noise (again, this is hard to fake), they are able to discuss
the Bible because they’ve actually been reading it, they receive answers to
prayer because they’ve actually been praying, they are able to be happy even in
the most miserable circumstances because their joy does not come from the
things of this world but from the Lord. Let it be known, ‘God is not mocked’
and such ‘a city’ that is ‘set on the hill’ of the salvation we have in Jesus
Christ ‘cannot be hid’. Selah.
Now, I feel that
I must admonish you, whoever may be reading this: do not be critical of people,
even if they are completely insane. Look at the scripture which Matthew wrote
of Jesus’ teaching: Judge not, that you be not judged. For with what judgment
you judge a man, you, yourself, shall be judged: and with what measure you
measure a man, it shall be measured to you. (Matthew 7:1-2)
That scripture is
talking about criticism, an expansion, you might say, on what Jesus taught
earlier: forgive or God won’t forgive you. And Jesus is comparing measurement
to judgment. Why is he doing that? Because you can’t get to heaven on the coattails
of someone else faith; it’s not a one-size-fits-all kind of deal. We all have
our own faith and our own standards, in case you didn’t notice, but these are
for ourselves, not for others. If you look at others through the filter of your
personal standards, you will become critical of them, because they won’t fit
your measurements of faith. Maybe you have a standard against alcohol, or
smoking, or men having beards, or whatever other petty thing that doesn’t
really matter to God, who looks at people’s hearts, but is really just a
superficial thing. Don’t assume other people have to measure up to your
standards.
If it helps, just
change the wording slightly. Instead of measure, say… ridiculousness. If you
get ridiculous in the way you judge others, then God in similar fashion will
hold you to a ridiculous standard when your day of judgment comes.
For example: you
might judge another person for drinking a single glass of wine, because if you
drink too much wine, you might get drunk, and that’s very bad. God, in similar
fashion, may judge you for let’s say… eating all the candy, because all that
sugar is unhealthy, and may even lead to diabetes, and that would be very bad
because your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, and it is a principle of
Christ that you be sober-minded i.e. responsible, which that isn’t.
You see it’s ridiculous,
yes? But people will amaze you by their capacity for ridiculousness. I, as in my
own personal standard, want to be as nice, and as patient, and as forgiving as
I possibly can be, because when the day of judgment comes, I want God to judge
me in similar fashion.
Lastly, I feel I
should remind you; this hypocrisy can be quite divisive, causing unneeded
separation between people. Although Jesus did say that he and his teachings
would come between people, when he said, ‘blessed are you, when men shall hate
you, and persecute you, and shall falsely say all manner of evil against you,
for my sake,’ he was referring only to HIS sake and HIS word. He was not
talking about the trouble you may get yourself into just for being a religious pinhead
or self-righteous moron. That, you should try to avoid.
Remember also that
God does hate certain things, and one of the principle things He hates is that
which sows discord (creates separation) among the brethren. Proverbs 6:19
If any person
says that you have to follow a certain tradition or standard which is not based
in the principles of Jesus’ doctrine, otherwise you can have no part in their
church or their fellowship, leave that person and that church and find one
whose identity is hid in Christ, one whose message is never one of pride (come unto
me; I am the best) or one obsessed with superficial tradition (come unto me
when you’re properly dressed) but always based in the powerful redeeming love
of Jesus Christ (come unto me and I’ll give you rest), and find a church whose
attitude towards people is one of inclusivity (whosever will, may come) and not
one of exclusivity (whosoever will look and act just like us, may stay).
Now I imagine
that there will be two basic groups of people who may end up reading this: the
liberal people who deeply want to thank me for expressing my Biblical views
against the oppressive tyranny of religious nut-jobs and the conservative
people who are seriously offended by what I have to say as it goes against so
many of their ‘traditions’ and ‘teachings’ and such.
To the liberals I
say, ‘you’re welcome, but seriously… GET A LIFE!’ It does you no good to live
in such a way that you’re stuck waiting for some guy like me to come along with
a Biblical viewpoint that validates your ‘precious feelings.’ Go and search out
Jesus, the one who can really satisfy.
To the conservatives
I say, ‘someone had to say it, if not me, then someone else. And you need to
take another look in the mirror.’ The Bible calls itself (or the scriptures) a
mirror, one that we can look into and use to cleanse our hearts of sin. So ask
yourselves: What does God see when he looks into my heart? Have I let my heart
become hard towards Him? What more can I learn from the scriptures about such
things?
As for the more
well-adjusted outliers here, ‘I’m glad you came!’
It is my hope and
my aim that I can actually help sincere people find more enrichment for their
lives in our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.
Until next time,
God bless!
Well put. Thankyou for expressing yourself on this topic.Its certainly not a balance between liberalism aand conservatism, but to be edifying and inclusive as Jesus is. Well done brother Bro W.Geronazzo
ReplyDeleteI said at the start that no one had to agree with me, but thank you, brother, very much.
DeleteAwesomely phrased and put together Nathan! You hit the nail on the head, thank you for this! God Bless! Bro.Mike Knutsen
ReplyDelete