Judging: The Christian's Duty
by Rev. Douglas Kuiper
From
The Standard Bearer,
Vol. 75; No. 7 and 8, January 1,15, 1999 Rev. Kuiper is pastor of the
Protestant Reformed Church of Byron Center, Michigan.
Part I: The Prevailing View of Tolerance
Tolerance is the buzzword of the day. We are
told that we must tolerate the ideas, words, and actions of each and every
segment of society. We may not pass judgment on the character of other
people, but must accept them the way they are. What our elected officials do
in their private lives must not influence our view of their qualifications
for public office. We must accept the lifestyle of homosexuals as (viable!)
alternatives to ours. We must cater to the whims and wishes of the
feminists. We must not speak of God, lest we anger the atheists.
This attitude of tolerance is found even in
the church world today. Many people, claiming to be Christian, will be quick
to remind us of Jesus' words that we must not judge (
Matt. 7:1) and that we may not cast a stone because we are no better
than the other person (
John. 8:7). This attitude has wreaked havoc in the Christian church,
including churches which are Reformed in their heritage. Heresy is no longer
denounced, and heretics are no longer disciplined. The foundational teaching
of Christianity - that Jesus Christ, the Son of God who came in the flesh,
is our only and complete Savior - is denied. We are told to tolerate the
religious thinking of non-Christians, because every religion has an element
of truth to it, and because salvation is not exclusively for Christians. We
must also tolerate in our churches the sinful actions of others. It is not
our business if an unmarried couple lives together! It is none of our
business if a member of our congregation practices homosexuality! We must
not judge them.
Considering this sad state of affairs in the
church world today, it is not surprising to learn that the most frequently
quoted text of Scripture is no longer
John
3:16, but
Matthew 7:1, as I recently heard from a radio speaker. In the past we
were reminded: "For God so loved the world…." This verse, wrongly
interpreted as teaching the lie of Arminianism that God loves every person,
was meant to comfort every person who believed it. "God loves me! All is
well with me." Today we are told: "Judge not!" This shift seems logical. If
God loves me and every other person, then He finds no fault with us, our
actions, or our ideas. And if He finds no fault with us, we should find no
fault with each other. However, the logic fails. It proceeds from a wrong
premise, that God loves every man, and from a wrong assumption, that a God
who loves a person ignores or tolerates that person's sins. Thus the
conclusion is also wrong. In actuality, the shift of most-quoted Bible text
indicates the increasing godlessness of our society. In the past, God
received the emphasis, even though God was wrongly understood. Now the
emphasis falls on man, to the point that in certain situations we must be
careful not to mention God's name! Man is god, free to construct his own
ideas of morality. And man's basic foundation for morality is his thinking:
"I am good. You are good. Let us agree not to find any bad in anyone."
There is one group of people, however, on
whom society permits us to pass judgment, and toward whom we may be
intolerant: those who judge this modern morality as wrong, and do not
tolerate it! In this latter group true Christians must find themselves, and
the true church of Jesus Christ must find herself. We must judge the
prevailing view of tolerance as wrong, for it is not scriptural. Scripture
is the only basis for our morality.
In these articles we will examine in more
detail the prevailing view of tolerance in the light of Scripture. Our
conclusion will be that this view is dangerous, godless, and unscriptural.
We will then examine in some detail the Scripture passages which are most
pertinent to the issue. From these passages, we will see that to judge is
the Christian's calling from God. Although God places some restrictions on
how we judge and show intolerance, He does not forbid intolerance.
This view which prevails today can be further
explained both from a negative and a positive viewpoint.
Negatively, the view is that our attitude
toward the ideas or actions of others must never be one of intolerance. An
attitude of intolerance is wrong for several reasons, we are told. First, it
manifests hatred; thus it is morally wrong. God Himself condemns intolerance
by forbidding us to judge (
Matt. 7:1) and by commanding us to love one another. Tolerance is one
expression of love. Second, this attitude reveals arrogance on our part for
thinking that we are better than the other person, that our view is the only
right view, and that our way of doing things is the only right way. This
arrogant thinking denies the inherent goodness of every person, each of whom
is created in God's image (according to the proponents of tolerance). An
attitude of intolerance is wrong, thirdly, because by it we judge a person
without trying to understand him or what causes him to act or to think the
way he does.
Because this attitude of intolerance is
wrong, we must not demonstrate such by speaking against the ideas or
practices of others. We must not condemn those who favor and practice
abortion, for we do not understand the hardships which the pregnant woman
endures and will endure if she has her baby. We must not condemn
homosexuality, for God created homosexuals in His image, and their sexual
orientation is a part of that creation. Besides, homosexuals are as capable
as heterosexuals of keeping God's law of love by being faithful to their
partners. We must not condemn those whose theological, social, or political
views differ from ours, for God gives to each of us a mind, and each of us
individually is free to use that mind as he wishes. Besides, the fact that
the Bible has been interpreted many different ways by many different people,
churches, and denominations indicates that there is no one correct view of
the Bible and its teachings.
Stated positively, this prevailing view is
that we must tolerate those who differ from us in thinking and practice.
Such tolerance would indicate love, compassion, and understanding for
others. In addition to tolerating these people, we ought to approve
their views and practices as legitimate. Perhaps our views and practices
will still differ from the next person's, but not because ours are
inherently right and the next person's are inherently wrong, for all people,
regardless of their views and practices, are good people.
This view of tolerance has specific
implications for the church of Christ. First, we must not preach an
exclusive gospel of salvation through Christ alone. We must not view the
teachings of other religions - Judaism, Mormonism, Buddhism, and all others
- as inherently wrong. We may not tell the Jew, the Mormon, or the Buddhist
that he must repent of his sins against the first four commandments of God's
law, and come to the knowledge of the true God who has revealed Himself in
Christ. Rather, we ought to approve the teachings of Judaism, Mormonism,
Buddhism, and other religions; present them as viable alternatives to the
Christian faith; and encourage members of our churches to incorporate into
their lives whatever good is found in these teachings.
Second, this affects our mission work. Our
mission work should consist not of calling others to faith and repentance,
but of helping the poor, the sick, and others who need physical and economic
help. We should also be more ambitious in developing contacts with other
religions, finding the good aspects of their teachings and practices, and
incorporating them into our own teachings and practices.
Third, we must not discipline those whom we
believe to be living in sin or teaching that which is contrary to our
understanding of the fundamental truths of Scripture. Rather, remembering
that we all sin, we must allow church members who are living in sin to
remain members in good standing, partaking freely of the Lord's table. We
ought even to find some good in their actions, and recommend that other
members follow the good example which this member has set in some way. A
person who emulates Jesus most closely will view the other person as a
brother, remind him that he is a good person, encourage that person in his
sin, and remind him that God is pleased.
What accounts for this view?
Certainly the natural depravity of man is one
explanation. Man by nature is able to do and think only that which is evil.
This view is another instance of man's disregard for the Word of God, and
for God Himself. God's Word tells man that he is a slave to sin by nature.
Man, however, claims to be free, and insists on manifesting that freedom by
doing what he wants to do. The pregnant woman insists on her freedom to
choose to live her own life, by aborting her child. The man insists on his
freedom by choosing to love other men.
However, this explanation does not
sufficiently explain why the church world at large has adopted this view.
Explaining this is the fact that the church has, as a general rule,
conformed herself to the world in every area of life, failing to live
antithetically .1
Underlying this failure is the fact that the church has lost her
consciousness of God's holiness. Her great message has been the love of God,
but she has divorced His love from His holiness. If the church can once more
understand what it means that God is holy, she will understand the need to
separate herself from the world's ideas and practices, to denounce sin as
sin, and to preach that the loving God, Jehovah, hates sin and punishes
sinners on account of their sin.
Christians must evaluate this [tolerance]
view as being dangerous, godless, and unscriptural.
The view is dangerous because it leads to
further accommodation of the church with the world, in violation of her
calling. God calls the church to live antithetically, that is, to live in
opposition to sin and the world and in devotion to Jehovah. The church lives
antithetically, not by pretending that sin is good, but by declaring sin to
be sin, and by disciplining those who impenitently continue to live a sinful
life. She lives antithetically also by preaching the truth of God, pointing
out the lie of Satan which opposes the truth, and disciplining those in her
midst who knowingly and impenitently promote the lie.
Failing to live antithetically, the church is
in danger of becoming the world, and of no longer being the church of God.
By living and thinking like the world, she shows that she is not
fundamentally different from the world, as God calls her to be. Thus her
attribute of holiness is lost. By teaching that which is contrary to
Scripture, she shows that she is not grounded firmly on the doctrine of the
apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief cornerstone, as
God calls her to be. Thus another attribute, that of apostolicity, is lost.
Failing to be holy and apostolic, she has no right to call herself church,
for she is no different from the world.
The danger of this view, then, is the same as
the danger of poison. Poison may look harmless, and even palatable, but it
is eaten to one's own destruction. The world's ideas and practices are a
poison which might appear attractive to some, but when the church tolerates
and approves them, she does so to her own destruction. This destruction is
not simply a matter of the church failing to be distinct from the world in
this life, but is also an everlasting destruction. The God who judges
righteously will judge those who impenitently teach false doctrine and who
live in immorality without repenting. Taking warning from this, the church
must not conform herself to the world, but be transformed (
Rom. 12:2)!
Our second evaluation of this view of
tolerance is that, for all its apparent godliness, it is in fact godless.
The various appeals to Scripture and to the attribute of God's love in
defense of this view might make it appear to be godly. There is mention of a
god - one who approves of tolerance and who cares for those who are the
victims of intolerance, hatred, bigotry, and mean
spiritedness.2
There is also mention of a heaven - the place where victims of such
intolerance are brought when their "persecution" has ended in death.
Despite this apparent godliness, the view is
godless in that it rejects Jehovah as the God whose Word is the standard for
doctrine and life. That we must tolerate, approve, and embrace the ideas and
practices of others is not God's Word, but man's! Man has set himself up as
the judge of right and wrong. And man says: "Tolerance is right! Intolerance
is wrong!"
That this is really what man has done is
evident when one considers that society itself, not the Word of God, decides
in what situations tolerance is right, and in what situations some
intolerance is permissible. The Word of God clearly forbids murder, in the
sixth commandment: "Thou shalt not kill" (
Ex. 20:13). But society, while condemning the murder of a two-year-old
child or forty-year-old adult, will tolerate the killing of unborn babies
and, in many instances, the killing of the terminally ill who desire a
dignified death. The Word of God clearly forbids adultery and all sexual
perversions, declaring that sex is permissible only between a husband and a
wife. This it does in the seventh commandment, "Thou shalt not commit
adultery" (
Ex. 20:14), as well as in other passages (cf.
I
Cor. 5:1-5 and
Heb.
13:4). But society, while intolerant of child pornography and
molestation, nevertheless permits adultery and fornication of all sorts, and
cries out for tolerance on the issue of homosexuality. When it comes to the
question "What is truth?" society attempts to give its own definition,
ignoring Jesus Christ and the Scriptures as the Truth.
These inconsistencies reveal that man has
dismissed Jehovah God and His Word as the standard of right and wrong. Men
do not want God telling them what to do! Man will be the judge of right and
wrong. Any appeal to Scripture to support the prevailing view of tolerance
does not proceed from a view of Scripture as God's Word, but from a view of
Scripture being the record of the thinking of society in the past. In the
Bible, a text can be found here and there to show that society in the past
has also apparently condemned intolerance.
This leads us to our third and fundamental
evaluation of this view: it is unscriptural. Perhaps you can hear some
asking: "What do you mean, unscriptural? Haven't you looked at
Matthew 7:1,
John
8:11, and
John
13:34? " The fact is, however, that many people interpret these passages
wrongly. The passages do not teach what those who use them to promote this
view of tolerance say they teach!
We must examine these and other pertinent
passages of Scripture to show that, rather than commanding tolerance of the
ideas and practices of all others, Scripture forbids such and requires us to
judge. This we will do in our next article.
1.
Francis A. Schaeffer's book The Great Evangelical Disaster
(Westchester, IL: Crossway Books, 1984) develops the thesis that the church
in the twentieth century has conformed herself to the world. This thesis is
stated on page 37: "Here is the great evangelical disaster - the failure of
the evangelical world to stand for truth as truth. There is only one word
for this - namely accommodation: the evangelical church has
accommodated to the world spirit of the age."
Return 2.
This was also the theme of a number of letters in the "Public Pulse"
section of the Grand Rapids Press. God loved the homosexual teacher,
and by death (the teacher died in December of '96 or January of '97) brought
him to a better place where he was free from persecution, one writer said.
Another writer applied
Romans 8:18 to the teacher, and prayed that he might rest in peace.
Return
Part II: An Examination of Pertinent Scripture Passages
In the Above article we examined the
prevalent view that we are not to pass judgment on the ideas and practices
of others but are to tolerate and approve their ideas and practices. That
this view is present even in the church is due to the fact that the church
has lost her consciousness of God's holiness. We evaluated this view as
dangerous, godless, and unscriptural.
In this article we will examine the Scripture
passages which are pertinent to the issue, in order to understand that God
requires judgment of us, and to see from God's Word how we must, and
must not, judge.
It will be helpful at the outset to set forth
a few principles which must guide us in our interpretation of Scripture.
Knowing and applying these principles should prevent us from coming to a
wrong understanding of Scripture's teachings on this issue.
That the Bible is the Word of God is the most
fundamental principle. All Scripture is the Word of God, according to
II Timothy 3:16. This means that we will find in the Bible no
contradictions, but only the truth, for Jehovah is the God of truth, and His
Word is truth (
John 17:17). Therefore, we may be sure that we will not find in
Scripture some texts which, properly understood, condone intolerance and
others which condemn intolerance; rather, we will find the one, consistent
truth regarding this matter. Furthermore, because God makes His truth
clearly known, we expect that Scripture will state that truth clearly.
A second fundamental principle is that
Scripture interprets Scripture. This means that when we examine Scripture to
see what it teaches about an issue, we must examine all pertinent
passages. If in doing so we find some verses which appear to
contradict others, we must first come to an understanding of the easier
verse, and then we will be able to explain the more difficult verse in its
light.
Third, we must remember that, in order to
understand a text of Scripture correctly, we must consider it in the light
of its context. A part of Scripture-whether a whole verse, several verses,
or part of a verse-cannot legitimately be used to support one's ideas or
actions if the text is not explained in light of its context. The context
will often qualify the teaching of the text, by indicating more specifically
in what situations a command applies, or how a command is to
be carried out.
Our examination of the various Scripture
passages which relate to the topic of judging and tolerance will proceed on
the basis of these principles. Because the word "judge" and its related noun
and verb forms are used many times in Scripture, we will not attempt to
examine every text in which they are found. Rather, we will focus on the
main passages which are used to support the idea of tolerance, and we will
briefly explain a few passages which clearly require that the child of God
discern between right and wrong.
Of those passages which are used to support
the idea of tolerance,
Matthew 7:1 is perhaps the most often quoted. The text reads: "Judge
not, that ye be not judged." It is clear that Jesus here forbids judging.
The question, however, is whether Jesus forbids all judging, or only
a certain kind of judging. Verse one by itself does not give us an
answer to this question. Those who quote only verse one to condemn
intolerance ignore the context, verses 2-5, and thus assume that the verse
forbids all judging and intolerance. However, one who reads verses 2-5 sees
that Jesus does not forbid all judging, but only hypocritical
judging. The text in its context (
Matthew 7:1-5) reads as follows:
"Judge not, that ye be not judged. For
with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what measure
ye mete, it shall be measured to you again. And why beholdest thou the
mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is
in thine own eye? Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull the
mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye? Thou
hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt
thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye."
Jesus tells the Jews in verse one not to
judge. In verse 2 He gives the reason why they must not judge: the standard
which they use to judge others will be the very same standard which others
use to judge them. They must not ignore their own sins while condemning the
same sins in others. To do this is to judge with a double standard, to judge
hypocritically. "Is it not hypocritical to condemn the brother for a little
fault, or even to try to help him overcome this fault, when you yourself are
guilty of a great fault?" This is the question Jesus was putting before the
people.
Notice that the sin of the two sinners (the
person and his brother) is the same in two respects. First, it is the same
in nature: in both instances a piece of wood was in a person's eye. Second,
it is the same in that both were currently sinning: the piece of wood was in
their eye at the moment. The difference between the two faults is only one
of size: one is small, the other great. For one whose sin is great to
condemn one whose sin is small, yet being the same sin, is hypocritical (cf.
v. 5). In other words, a woman who is aborting an eight-month fetus is in no
position to rebuke a man who kills a bank teller, and the homosexual is in
no position to criticize unfaithfulness in a heterosexual marriage!
Matthew 7:1, taken in its context, does not forbid all judging and
intolerance, but only hypocritical judging and intolerance. In fact, it does
requires of us that, after repenting of our own sins, we condemn the
brother's sin as sin, and help him turn from it. "First cast out the beam
out of thine own eye," Jesus says, "then shalt thou see clearly to cast out
the mote out of thy brother's eye" (vs. 5). Jesus commands genuine,
not hypocritical, intolerance of sin which the brother commits.
John
8:7 and 11 are also important. The context is the story of the woman who
was caught in the very act of adultery and was brought to Jesus by the
scribes and Pharisees. In verse 7, Jesus says to the scribes and Pharisees:
"He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her." In
verse 11 He speaks to the woman: "Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no
more." The advocates of tolerance use these words to argue that one should
not condemn others, because he is no better than they.
Although we will explain what it means to
judge in more detail later, understand for now that when one judges, he
gives a verdict: guilty or innocent. After one is judged, he is sentenced:
the guilty person is condemned (sentenced to punishment) and the innocent is
set free. The point is that judging and condemning are two distinct actions,
related but not identical.
Bearing this in mind, notice that Jesus did
in fact judge this woman, but He did not condemn her. By telling her, "Go,
and sin no more," Jesus indicates that she did sin. In itself, the
Pharisees' accusation was correct, and Jesus judged sin to be sin. This
shows intolerance of the sinful action! Following Jesus' example, we
must tell sinners to show evidence of genuine repentance by no longer
committing sin.
While Jesus did judge the woman, He did not
condemn her. She could go free; she would not be put to death. The gospel
for penitent sinners is: "There is therefore now no condemnation to them
which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the
Spirit" (
Rom. 8:1). This message Jesus gives the woman: Jesus would Himself be
condemned for her! He would bear her punishment, that she might go free!
Jesus' answer to the Pharisees exposes their
hypocritical judgment in the matter. (Their primary purpose, of course, had
nothing to do with the woman; it was to trap Jesus in His own words. Yet
Jesus knew that the Pharisees prided themselves in their self-righteousness,
and responded in light of this fact.) The Pharisees, Jesus reminds them,
were also guilty of sin, and specifically of adultery, whether in the act or
in the heart. Because they also were not free from sin, they were as worthy
of death as she was. So, by wondering what judgment she ought to have
received, they revealed their own hypocrisy and wrong motivation.
John
8:7 and 11 teach us how to deal with others who sin. Verse 11 teaches us
that we must desire the sinner's repentance; verse 7 teaches us that we must
not do so hypocritically, with wrong motives, or in an improper manner. The
passage does not mean, however, that we must never hold each other
accountable for our sins (that is, judge sin to be sin).
One more passage which is frequently quoted
is the one in which we are commanded to love one another. Actually, many
passages in Scripture give this command.
John
13:34 is one of them. There we read: "A new commandment I give unto you,
That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one
another."
What is love, and what does love involve?
Love is a bond of friendship, which manifests itself in seeking the good of
the other person. This might mean seeking the other person's bodily good: if
he is hungry, thirsty, cold, or naked, we must take care of that person's
physical needs. It could also involve seeking the person's spiritual good.
If he or she is walking in a way that is contrary to God's law and thus
displeasing to the Lord, we must seek to turn that person from his or her
sinful way, in love for that person.
In
John
13:34, Jesus does not command everyone to love. The command comes to His
disciples-the twelve men whom Jesus specially chose to follow Him during His
earthly ministry. The command did not even come to all of the twelve,
but only to eleven of them. One of them, Judas Iscariot, who would later
betray Jesus in his hatred for Jesus, was not present. That the eleven
disciples were the ones to whom Jesus spoke is significant. As Jesus loved
these eleven, they must love each other! The command does not mean that all
men must love all men; rather, it means that in the church (represented by
the eleven disciples), the saints must love each other as Jesus loved the
church, giving Himself for it.
Such love does not rule out intolerance of
wrong ideas or actions on the part of fellow saints. True love seeks the
salvation of the fellow saint. Thus true love seeks to turn the saint from
his or her sins (
James 5:20).
Another passage which, although apparently
not used by advocates of tolerance, might seem to support their position is
Romans 2:1-3, which reads:
"Therefore thou art inexcusable, O man,
whosoever thou art that judgest: for wherein thou judgest another, thou
condemnest thyself; for thou that judgest doest the same things. But we
are sure that the judgment of God is according to truth against them
which commit such things. And thinkest thou this, O man, that judgest
them which do such things, and doest the same, that thou shalt escape
the judgment of God?"
The "man" whom Paul addresses must be
understood to be every man and any man. Paul, having explained in the last
part of chapter 1 the sins to which the world gives itself over (note the
context!), now says that each and every man who condemns these sins, while
doing the same things himself, is inexcusable. We can expect God's judgment
upon us, if we live in the same sins which we condemn in others! Paul's
point is also to warn against hypocritical judging-a warning which we all
need. However, the text does not forbid us to judge rightly!
Other passages of Scripture positively
command us to judge. One passage which clearly does so is
John
7:24. This is set in the context of Jesus' discussion with the Jews who
question His doctrine, and have accused Him of having a devil (
John 7:20) and of breaking the Sabbath day by healing a man on the
Sabbath (
John 5:1-16). To them He says: "Judge not according to the appearance,
but judge righteous judgment." By saying "Judge not," Jesus does not mean to
forbid judging as such, but to forbid a certain manner of judging, as the
positive part of this verse makes clear. We may judge, but when we do so we
must judge righteously.
Outward, superficial judgment-that is,
judging simply on the basis of what appears to be the case, without
knowing all the facts-is rash, unfair, undiscerning judgment which is
contrary to the ninth commandment of God's law. God hates such judging.
Righteous judgment is carried out using the law of God as the standard by
which to discern whether what appears to be the case actually is the case.
I Corinthians 5 is an important chapter as regards the positive duty of
judging. First, in verse 3, Paul states under the inspiration of the Spirit
that he has passed judgment on a member of the church in Corinth who was
living in the sin of fornication. His judgment was "to deliver such an one
unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in
the day of the Lord Jesus." This is a bold judgment on his part.
Second, in verses 9-13, Paul reminds the
saints of their duty to judge people that are within the church, as to
whether or not they are obeying the law of God. Those who claim to be
Christians and are members of the church, but who are also judged to be
impenitently disobedient to any commandment of God's law (cf. vv. 9-10,
which is not an exhaustive list) must be excluded from the church's
fellowship. Paul, under the inspiration of the Spirit, tells the church not
to tolerate impenitent sinners.
Other passages also indicate that it is our
responsibility to judge. Jesus asks the people in
Luke
12:57, "Yea, and why even of yourselves judge ye not what is right?"
Jesus rebukes the scribes and Pharisees in
Matthew 23:23 and
Luke
11:23, saying: "ye pay tithe of mint and anise and cummin, and have
omitted the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith; these
ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone." It was their
duty, according to the law, to judge-but they had failed in this duty. Paul
prayed that the love of the Philippians would "abound yet more and more in
knowledge and in all judgment" (Phil. 1:9). He tells the Corinthians, "I
speak as to wise men; judge ye what I say" (
I Cor. 10:15).
Some passages of Scripture seem to forbid
judging, while others clearly require it. Studying the contexts of those
which seem to forbid judging, we find that judging itself is not actually
forbidden, but a wrong kind of judging. God hates hypocritical judging! But
God loves righteous judgment on the part of His children. That He loves it
is clear from the fact that He commands it, and has given His law as a
standard by which to do it.
It is, therefore, the Christian's duty to
judge. This duty will be set forth positively in the next article.