by jimwalton » Mon Oct 09, 2023 8:50 am
First let’s talk about the real meaning of the passage (Matthew 7.1). Jesus is not referring to legitimate discussions about right and wrong, and helping to correct negative behavior. He is condemning finding fault in others based on our own sense of pride, prejudice, or meanness. He is teaching that such behavior will come back to bite you because your pride or meanness will be perceived, and you too will be weighed in the balances and found wanting.
R.T. France wrote, “What he is condemning is the habit of censorious and carping criticism, not the exercise of the critical faculty.”
John Stott: “The censorious critic is a fault-finder who is negative and destructive towards people and enjoys actively seeking out their failings.”
People are really lousy at seeing how they have been hurtful to other people. They’re much better at seeing how other people have been hurtful to them. Or, they perceive other people as hurtful, projecting their attitudes onto others, so they don’t have to face up to their own attitudes and behavior.
You’ll notice, then, he talks about hypocrisy (vv. 2 and following). Jesus is condemning the kind of judging each other that is just hypocritical: heaping criticism and condemnation on others without being willing to examine your own behavior.
Now, to your question in specific. When others are engaged in sinful behavior, we’re expected to recognize that (1 Cor. 5.12). Jesus was quick and harsh to call out hypocrisy in so-called believers. Jesus recognized sin when He saw it (though he seldom called it out). We have to be wise in when we speak and when we bite our tongues; we can see sin without rebuking the person about it .(Jesus seldom rebuked the sin around Him, but there were times when it was appropriate.)
If you’re walking at night and see a guy with a knife, either go in a different direction or scream. That’s not “judging.” We are wise to be fearful of danger or to try to stop perpetrators of crime, etc.
“how can I back this up biblically?” Jesus saw the sin of the woman caught in adultery (John 8.1-11), and even let her know He saw it, but He was gentle with her. Jesus saw the sin of the woman at the well, but He was gentle with her (Jn. 4.1-26). Jesus must have seen sin all around Him, but barely spoke of it.
The only time I’m aware that Jesus called people out on their sins was in his conversations with the religious leaders. Other than that, he was often in the middle of swarms of "sinners" and never breathed a word except to urge them that the kingdom of God was at hand, and they should repent and believe the gospel.
This is not to claim he was tolerant of sin, but he came to seek and to save, not to judge. I believe our commission is the same. Lk. 15.7: Seek the lost sheep. 1 Cor. 9.22: become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some. Acts 1.8: Be his witnesses to the uttermost parts. Mt. 6.1ff. (also 1 Cor. 5.12): Don't judge. It's not your place.
That requires a great deal of restraint and compassion on our part, as well as tolerance. The kingdom doesn't advance by barbed words, but by the Spirit and in truth.
If we follow Christ's example, what we should be least tolerant of is Christian hypocrisy, "Christian" hatred, and "Christian" unchristlikeness.
Job 40.1-14 is a warning to those who would be quick to call out sinners on their sin. Is it always best to immediately identify and crush wickedness? Is the best approach to righteous and redeeming relationships to call out sin in others in righteous rebuke (Job 40.11-13)? Certainly it is within God’s and our power to do this, but is it always best and right? Do mercy and grace have no place in a truly just world?
Whenever human beings have the power to play God, and use it to punish the wicked, evil triumphs. The Spanish Inquisition and the holy wars are horror stories in human history. Prompted by the motive to identify and punish evil in the name of Christ, they concocted greater evil than they sought to punish. Cf. Mt. 26.52: Those who live by the sword will die by the sword. Judge others, and you will be judged by the same measure you use to judge them (Mt. 7.2). So go ahead. Walk down the street and unleash your tirades of identifying sin, calling people to the dust, and righteously putting them in their place.
It's odd. I thought God called us, instead, to be agents of reconciliation. I thought God called us, instead, to become weak to win the weak, so that by all possible means we might save some (1 Cor. 9.22). We are to be priests, proclaiming the gospel of God that others might become an acceptable offering to God (Rom. 15.16). Jesus repeatedly doesn't call out people's sins, so that he can show the patience of redeeming grace.
But you know what? God has called each of us as he has called us. This is the bottom line: bring people to salvation in Jesus. If God has called you to do that by calling out sinners on their sin, then do it with relish, but also with wisdom. As long as the result is salvation in Jesus, then do it. But if the result is NOT salvation, then we all have right to question your call, because the point is to witness, to make disciples, and to be agents of reconciliation. And those who are called to show redeeming grace, then do that with zest, as long as the result is salvation in Jesus. But if the result is NOT salvation, then maybe the "soft" approach should be questioned, because the point is to bring people into the kingdom by every godly means necessary.