My message tonight is on ruling and judging. I would say itās one of those messages, if by any chance you left your mind out in the parking lot with the car, you better slip out and fetch it because youāre going to need it. I know a lot of people think they can safely leave their minds outside when they go to church because they wonāt be needing them, but tonight you will!
Our theme for a number of weeks has been āReigning in Life with Christ.ā And this is very directly related to that theme because ruling is always directly related to judging. Iāve spoken on this subject before but somehow I got new insight when I was preparing the message today. I think judging is one of the difficult subjects in the Bible to get a clear grasp of. Itās also very important and I think partly through ignorance and partly through disobedience, multitudes of professing Christians are going contrary to scripture many, many times in the way they judgeāor the way they donāt judge. There is an apparent paradox in the statements of scripture, just even to look only at the New Testament. There are some scriptures which say donāt judge and there are other scriptures which say do judge. What Iām going to try to do is offer you a principle through which you will be able to understand whether you ought to judge or not to judge in any given situation.
First of all letās look at some of the scriptures against judging. Iāll only touch on them lightly but not dwell on them because we may come back to them. But I want you to see the apparent paradox to start with. In the sermon on the mount, Matthew 7:1ā5, Jesus is speaking and he says:
āJudge not, that ye be not judged. For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged; and with what measure you measure out, it shall be measured back to you again. And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brotherās eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye [or the plank]? Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out 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 brotherās eye.ā
Well Jesus says there very emphatically, donāt judge. And if you do judge, the judgment you judge with will come back to you. I believe it will come back to you from two sources: human and divine. I believe people, in the long run, judge you as you judge them. And I also believe God judges you in accordance with the way youāve judged people.
Then in Romans 2:1ā3:
āTherefore 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?ā(KJV)
Romans 2 essentially deals with religious people. The Jews are the example but it applies in most ways to most religious people. I donāt know whether youāve ever noticed that religious people often think that because they know what is right and can prove others wrong, that proves them right themselves. I want to tell you that is not so. In fact, the people that are always judging other people are usually wrong themselves.
And then in Romans 14:1ā4:
āHim that is weak in the faith receive ye, but not to judge his speculations. For one may eat all things, another who is weak, eateth herbs [or vegetables]. Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not; and let not him which eateth not judge him that eateth: for God hath received him. Who art thou that judgest another manās servant? to his own master he standeth or falleth. Yea, he shall be holden up; for God is able to make him stand.ā
And then a little further on in the same chapter, verse 10ā13:
āBut why dost thou judge thy brother? or why dost thou set at nought thy brother? for we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. For it is written, As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God. So then every one of us shall give account of himself to God. Let us not therefore judge one another any more: but judge this rather, that no man put a stumblingblock or an occasion to fall in his brotherās way.ā
And then in 1Corinthians 4:1ā5. These are the passages against judging:
āLet a man so account of us, as of the ministers of Christ, and stewards of the mysteries of God. Moreover it is required in stewards, that a man be found faithful. But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of you, or of manās judgment; yea, I judge not mine own self. For I am not conscious of anything against me, yet am I not hereby justified.ā
Thatās a remarkable statement. Paul says I donāt have anything on my conscious, Iām not aware of anything Iāve done wrong. But that doesnāt justify.
āBut he that judges me is the Lord. Therefore judge nothing before the time, until the Lord come, who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts: and then shall every man have praise of God.ā
And one last passage against judging which really is one of the key passages. James 4:11ā12:
āSpeak not evil one of another, brethren. He that speaketh evil of his brother, and judgeth his brother, speaketh evil of the law, and judgeth the law: but if thou judge the law, thou art not a doer of the law, but a judge. There is one lawgiver, who is able to save and to destroy: who art thou that judgest another?ā
Iām going to come back to that passage later on because I think it contains the key to understanding when we are to judge and when we are not. But notice which most Christians, I think, have overlooked. That speaking evil of another believer is judging that believer. And we are specifically prohibited to speak evil of one another. I would say, in my observations, at least fifty percent of the Christians I meet are guilty of doing that: of speaking evil of another believer. Itās contrary to scripture.
Now letās look at the scriptures that say we shall judge. First of all, John 7:24. Jesus is speaking to the people of his day concerning his claim to be the Messiah. And he says:
āJudge not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment.ā
Judge righteously or justly. So there he tells them to judge. And then in 1Corinthians 5:1ā5:
āIt is commonly reported that fornication [or immorality] is among you, and such fornication as is not so much as named among the Gentiles, that one should have his fatherās wife. And ye are puffed up, and have not rather mourned, that he that hath done this deed might be taken away from among you. For I verily, as absent in body, but present in spirit, have judged already, [noticeāI have already judged] as though I were present, concerning him that hath so done this deed. In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, when ye are gathered together, and my spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus Christ, 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.ā
Not merely was there a judgment, but it was an extremely severe judgment to deliver a man over to Satan. And then in the same chapter, 1Corinthians 5, verses 11ā13:
āBut now I have written unto you not to keep company, if any man that is called a brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolater, or a railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner, with such an one no not to eat. For what have I to do to judge them also that are without? Do not ye judge them that are within? But them that are without God judgeth. Therefore put away from among yourselves that wicked person.ā
When Paul says them that are without, whom is he referring to? The unbelievers. But when he says them that are within, who is he referring to? The believers, thatās right. So he says you donāt judge the unbelievers but you do judge the believers.
And then the same epistle, chapter 6, verses 1ā6:
āDare any of you, having a matter against another, go to law before the unrighteous, and not before the believers? Do ye not know that the saints shall judge the world? And if the world shall be judge by you, are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters? Know ye not that we shall judge angels? How much more things that pertain to this life? If then ye have judgments of things pertaining to this life, set them to judge who are least esteemed in the church.ā
However, that can equally well be translated as a question. Do you set them to judge who are least esteemed in the church? Thatās more probable. You have to understand in the original Greek manuscripts there is no punctuation. So that always has to be supplied by the translator. They donāt have commas, periods, questions marks or anything. And sometimes you could equally well put a question mark or leave it out. But most of the modern versions put it with a question. Do you set them to judge who are least esteemed in the church? Verse 6:
āBut brother goest to law with brother, and that before the unbelievers. Now therefore there is utterly a fault among you, because ye go to law with one another. Why do ye not rather take wrong?ā
So Paul there definitely expected the church to judge disputes between members in the church.
And perhaps we could look in Matthew 18:15ā17:
āMoreover if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall ,hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother. But if he will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established.ā
Notice again this is a dispute between believers. And ultimately if they canāt settle it on a small scale, it has to go before the church. Thatās not an option, itās a definite commandment. We are not free to leave disputes unresolved. If we can resolve them before they get to the church thatās good. But otherwise weāre obligated to take them to the church.
āAnd if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church: but if he neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican.ā
A man who will not receive the decision of the church loses his right to be treated as a believer. Thatās a tremendously solemn statement. So in those passages that Iāve just read we see scripture places upon us an obligation to judge. In the passages that I read before, we were warned against judging. What is the explanation? Iām coming to what I believe is the basic principle that resolves this apparent paradox.
The principle is this: judging is a function of ruling, descending downward from God. Itās hard for Americans to understand this because in the American Constitution, by deliberate design, judging has been separated from ruling. The executive branch rules and the judicial branch judges. Now that separation has no basis in scripture whatever. Iām not saying itās wrong or bad, Iām not attacking the Constitution. In fact, Iām pledged to uphold the Constitution from the year l970 when I became an American citizen. And itās my sincere intention to do that. But Iām just pointing out to you that if you look at things from the point of view of the American Constitution, you do not understand the principles of scripture because in scripture two things were always united: ruling and judging. This goes back to the very nature of God himself and itās imparted from God downward into the human race.
Letās look at a few scriptures. Genesis 18:25. This is a conversation between the Lord and Abraham concerning the Lordās announced intention to judge Sodom. And Abraham is arguing with the Lord in a certain sense as to whether itās going to be a just judgment.
āThat be far from thee to do after this manner, to slay the righteous with the wicked; and that the righteous should be as the wicked, that be far from thee: shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?ā
Who is the judge of all the earth? God. The ruler is also the judge. Notice in parenthesis, a principle thatās established right at the beginningāand I believe holds throughout scripture. It is contrary to justice to treat the righteous as the wicked. Thatās very important to understand. A modern American culture is kind of against judging. Thereās an attitude that dislikes authority and law and law enforcement and all that. It comes from a perverted idea that the primary function of judging is to punish the wicked. Itās not, thatās secondary. The primary function of judging is to protect the righteous. And that has almost gone by the board in modern America. The whole judicial system bends over backwards to protect the criminal and offers very little protection to the victim. This is a typical instance of perverted thinking in our modern culture. We have to bear in mind the primary function of justice is protect the righteous. And it is never in line with Godās will to deal with the righteous as with the wicked.
Let me make a parenthetical observation and I hope it doesnāt upset you. I believe thatās got a very direct bearing on how we treat the matter of divorce. I personally believe that itās contrary to scripture to treat the innocent party the same as the guilty. I think itās an absolute denial of the basic principle of scripture. That be far from thee, that it should be with the righteous as with the wicked. And by implication, God said thatās right Abraham, Iāll never depart from that principle. But notice that God is the judge of all the earth.
Now letās look into the New Testament, weāll see two more facts about judgment. First in 1Peter 1:17:
āAnd if ye call on the Father, who without respect of persons judgeth according to every manās work, pass the time of your sojourning here in fear...ā
Or, if you call him Father, who judges every man according to his work. So who is the ultimate judge? God the Father. But in the divine plan, God has delegated the office of judge to another, whoās that? Jesus. John 5:22. Jesus is speaking and he says:
āFor the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment to the Son.ā
So you see thereās a downward process of transmitting the authority to judge. The Father is the ultimate authority, the ultimate ruler, the ultimate judge. But he has delegated the function of judging to his Son, Jesus Christ. There are two reasons given there which we donāt need to look at now. The first is that all men shall honor the Son as they honor the Father. So in order to make sure that all the human race pays honor to the Son, God has made him the judge. In a properly established legal system, in any court of law there is one person who is honored above all others. Who is that? The judge. And thatās how it is. Jesus is honored above all others because heās the judge.
The second reason why heās the judge is because heās the Son of man. Heās a judge who can understand our human frailties and infirmities because heās experienced them himself.
All right. Now, if you look at the history of Israel, youāll see that judging and ruling were never divorced from one another. And itās rather interesting because the first rulers were judges. The book of Judges is the first book describing people who ruled within the area of Israelās inheritance. After that, the rulers became the judges. And if you study the period under the kings, youāll find there was no Supreme Court to which anybody could appeal against the kingās judgment. The kingās judgment was ultimate. He was both the king and the judge. Now Iām not arguing in favor of that at the moment. What Iām pointing out is that you must never divorce judging from ruling. This is the principle which will help you to understand where you should judge and where you should not.
Now, in human society in various areas, on various levels, God has appointed men as judges. In the Old Testament these men were actually called gods. This is a very interesting fact. The sacred word for God, Elohim, is applied to men who were judges. Why was that? Because as judges they were representing God to his people. Their authority came from God as long as they rightly administered Godās law. So for any human being to have the word Elohim, which is the word for the one true God, applied to them, indicates the tremendous sanctity and authority of being a judge.
However, in the Old Testament in Psalm 82, God reproves the judges of Israel. And itās interesting to read it because it brings this point out very clearly. Psalm 82, the whole psalm. Itās short, itās just eight verses.
āGod standeth in the congregation of the mighty; he judgeth among the gods...ā
Thatās a remarkable statement. Who are the gods? The judges. God is judging the judges, which he will do. We need to bear that in mind. Now heās judging the judges because theyāve been unjust judges.
āHow long will ye judge unjustly; and accept the person of the wicked? Defend the poor and fatherless; do justice to the afflicted and the needy.ā
You see, the primary obligation of a judge is to protect the righteous.
āDeliver the poor and needy; rid them out of the hand of the wicked [but these people wonāt listen]. They know not, neither will they understand; they walk on in darkness; all the foundations of the earth are out of course.ā
Thatās a remarkable statement. To me it indicates that when judgment is no longer just, the whole structure of society is out of line. The whole of society depends on just judgment.
āI have said [this is God speaking], Ye are gods.ā
Why? Because they were judges representing God to his people.
āAnd all of you are children of the most high. But ye shall die like men, and fall like one of the princes.ā
Why? Because they had abused their position as judges and perverted justice. And then the psalmist says in the last verse:
āArise, O God, judge the earth; for thou shalt inherit all nations.ā
What the psalmist is saying in effect is we havenāt had justice from human judges, God, reassert your right to judge. We want just judgment.
All right. Now we come to the principle summed up. If you can grasp this I really believe it can help you. There are four things that go together. Iāll say them and repeat them. One, responsibility. Two, authority. Three, judging. And four, being judged. Iāll say that again. One, responsibility. Two, authority. Three, judging. And four, being judged. The principle is this: wherever you have responsibility, you must have authority. Otherwise your responsibility cannot be discharged. In whatever area you give a person responsibility, you have to give them the needed authority to discharge their responsibility. If you give the elder sister the responsibility of baby-sitting the younger children then you have to give that older sister enough authority to see that she can do the job. Otherwise her job is a mockery, itās impossible. Wherever thereās responsibility, there must be adequate authority to carry out the responsibility. You cannot divorce responsibility and authority.
Conversely, if a person has authority without responsibility, that person is a despot. And thatās of course, a situation in many areas of the earth today. Probably a lot of people in Iran would say that the Shah has been exercising authority without due responsibility. Whether thatās right or wrongābut you see, you cannot separate them one way or the other. Responsibility without authority is ineffective. But authority without responsibility is despotism. The two must go together. And where you have authority you are obligated to judge because part of having authority is judging. Every ruler, where he rules, must judge. And this we need to bear in mind, where you judge, youāre going to be judged by the ultimate judge. All judges are ultimately accountable to The Judge. Thereās quite a good illustration of this in Hebrews 13:17.
āObey them that have the rule over you [or that are your leaders] and submit yourselves: for they watch for your souls, as they that must give account...ā (KJV)
To whom will they give account? To the Lord. Now because they have responsibility for your souls, what must they have with the responsibility? Authority. Otherwise their responsibility is vain. So weāre told to obey those who are responsible for our souls. Because they have responsibility and exercise authority, theyāre going to have to exercise judgment. But being judges, theyāre also going to have to give an account for the judgment that they exercise. So there are the four things in that one verse. Responsibility, authority, judging and being judged.
And notice, itās applied to the Christian church. I would say that in one way or another, those words have a direct application to the lives of almost all of us here. And I donāt know anybody that would be an exception. All of us, I believe, should be in the position of either being under authority or exercising authority. And I just want to go a little further with that point. I want to make it a personal question to you. Does anybody rule over you? Does anybody watch for your soul? And if so, who? And if they do, do they know it? And do you know it? I believe there are some possible, legitimate exceptions; a Christian who is imprisoned for his faith is left on his own. But I donāt believe any Christian in normal daily living should be in a situation where he is answerable to nobody and nobody is watching over his soul. And those who watch over him have the obligation to judge him.
Now, I want to give you examples of persons who are authorized to judge and persons who are not authorized to judge. First of all weāll take an example of someone authorized to judge. In Matthew 25:31ā33:
āWhen the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory...ā
What is indicated by his sitting on the throne, what is he doing? Ruling. Whatās the next thing heās going to do as a ruler? Judge, thatās right.
āBefore him shall be gathered all nations; and he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats...ā
Notice his first public function as the God appointed ruler at the close of this age is to judge those whom he rules. Ruling and judgment go together.
Now letās look at some examples of people who were challenged or tempted to judge but they didnāt have the authority because they werenāt rulers. Weāll go first of all to Lot in Sodom. Genesis 19:9. You remember the story, the angels had come to Lotās house and the men of Sodom who were very wicked wanted to get in and have sex with the angels. And Lot was reproving them. Now Lot had gone to Sodom as a visitor and then had settled in the city but he never had been given any official position in the city. And so these men whom he was trying to reprove and discipline answered this way:
āAnd they said, Stand back. And they said again, This one fellow came in to sojourn, and he will needs be a judge: now will we deal worse with thee, than with them.ā
They said, You have no authority to judge. Nobody made you a judge in this city, youāre just a visitor. Donāt try to tell us what to do. And they were absolutely right within those limits. They were not right in what they were attempting to do.
Then look at the case of Moses in Exodus 2:14. Moses, self appointed, went out to deliver Israel. The first day he killed an Egyptian who was persecuting one of his fellow Israelites. The next day he found two Israelites fighting and tried to administer judgment to them. But he got sent away. Incidentally, itās usually easier to deal with an Egyptian than an Israelite. So, verse 13, Moses said to the one who was doing wrong to his fellow Israelite:
āWherefore smitest thou thy fellow? And he [the man] answered and said, Who made thee a prince [or a ruler] and a judge over us? Intendest thou to kill me, as thou killedst the Egyptian?ā
He had the right point. Moses had no authority. Nobody had made him a ruler. Therefore, he had no right to judge. He ended up running away, forty years of exile in the desert.
Now in Luke 12, Jesus actually quotes those words and he applies them to himself. Luke 12:13ā14:
āAnd one of the company said unto him, Master, speak to my brother, that he divide the inheritance with me.ā
He said Iām being cheated out of my inheritance by my brother. Jesus said to him:
āMan, who made me a judge or a divider over you?ā
He said I donāt have any authority. Thereās a court thatās here to do that, there are elders, thereās a Sanhedrin. I donāt have any authority, I canāt judge you. See the wisdom of the Lord? Although he was the Son of God and Godās representative, he did not have authority in that area. So he didnāt judge. How many of us would be as wise?
Now Iām going to ask a very important question. Where we have responsibility we have authority; where we have authority we are obligated to judge. I wonder if we could say that together. Say it after me. Where we have responsibility we have authority; where we have authority we are obligated to judge.
Now, hereās the thousand dollar question. Where are we responsible to judge? Whom are we responsible to judge? And what are we responsible to judge? See, I have a friend who walked past my tennis court about a year ago I suppose, a Jewish attorney. And he invited himself to play tennis with me and weāve been playing tennis off and on ever since. Well, he was recently elected a County Court judge and so now I play tennis with the judge. And he was explaining to me the responsibilities that he felt in this new office. He said to me, Believe it or not, I go to bed at 8:00 oāclock every night, I find it so exhausting trying to do my job right. But he said I only am entitled the maximum penalty I can give is one year in prison. Thatās the limit of my authority. So I was thinking about that and I thought thereās a good example. Whereās the area of his judgment? Only one county, Broward County. He has no authority in Dade County or Palm Beach County, only one county. What kind of people is he authorized to judge? Only those who commit offenses for which the maximum penalty is less than one year in prison. Otherwise other kinds of criminals are outside of his judgment. What is he entitled to judge? Anything thatās contrary to Florida law or the statutes or ordinances of Broward County. For instance, if a man in a 30 mile zone drives 35 miles an hour, heās entitled to judge that man for that act. But if a man in that car driving at 30 miles an hour puts down his convertible hood, thatās not an offense, he canāt judge that man for that act. Or, if the man in a 55 mile area drives at 45 miles an hour, heās got no authority to deal with that act. Heās only got authority to deal, to judge in a certain area with certain types of people in certain acts. Thatās all.
Now that basically is typical of all judgment. Thereās an area, there are people and there are acts that we must judge. Iāll say that again because it applies practically speaking to all of us. Thereās an area, there are certain people and there are certain acts. But outside the area and with other people, or with different acts, there is no authority to judge. Okay.
Now, Iām asking you in what areas are we authorized to judge? Whom are we authorized to judge and for what may we judge them? Is that clear? Have you got those three questions? In what area, whom and for what? See, the question of judgment is not complete till weāve answered all three questions. For instance, you might have authority to judge some people but not about some things. And if you judge those people for things that youāre not authorized to judge, then youāre exceeding your authority.
Now first of all let me say one thing that we are never responsible to judge. I think this is very, very important. It was a great relief to me when I discovered I was never responsible to judge this thing because frankly, like most religious people, Iād been doing a lot of it. And it was a heavy responsibility and it was getting more and more difficult to be sure I was right. And then one day I just realized I didnāt have to do it at all. This is the way Iām going to describe it. We are not responsible for the final evaluation of anyoneās character or conduct, including our own. Okay? Iām going to say that again. We are not responsible for the final evaluation of anyoneās character or conduct, including our own. Isnāt that a relief? I know some Christians, they think theyāve got to decide just who is going to heaven, just who is going to hell, just who is good, just who is bad. Basically thatās not your worry. Leave it to God. Heās going to take care of it.
Now letās look at some scriptures. 1 Corinthians 4, weāve been there before but weāre going back now for the principle. 1Corinthians 4:1ā5. The first two verses are just introductory.
āLet a man so account of us, as of the ministers of Christ, and stewards of the mysteries of God.ā
Itās the word steward that leads to the thought of judging because a steward is answerable to the one for whom he is a steward for the way he conducts his stewardship. Okay?
āMoreover it is required in stewards, that a man be found faithful.ā
A steward will be judged according to whether he has been faithful or not. Now Paul says I and my fellow ministers, we are stewards of the mysteries of God. Weāre going to be judged for whether weāve been faithful in handling those mysteries.
āBut with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of you, or of manās judgment: yea, I judge not mine own self.ā
Paul says in the area Iām talking about, you donāt judge me, I donāt judge you, I donāt judge myself. This is an area of judgment thatās not left in our hands. Verse 4:
āFor I know nothing by myself...ā
But itās better translated, Iām not conscious of anything against myself. I donāt know of anything that Iāve done wrong. But, he says, Iām not justified by that because Iām not the judge. Maybe the judge does know something I donāt know.
āHe that judgeth me is the Lord.ā Here is an area where the Lord alone is the judge.
āTherefore judge nothing before the time, [what time? The time when the Lord will do the judging] until the Lord come, [this is a judgment that will take place when the Lord comes] who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts.ā
Why is the Lord the only one who can judge in this area? Because nobody else knows all the secrets of menās hearts and motives. And therefore we are not able to judge accurately or fairly and are not asked to do it. The only one that can do that is the Lord. He knows everything. He knows our motives. He knows how honest weāve been. He knows when weāve been hypocritical and insincere. Then heās going to judge. Then it says:
ā...then shall every man have praise of God.ā (KJV)
When that praise comes, it will be accurately evaluated. I have sometimes praised people and later discovered they didnāt deserve it. Did you ever do that? In this case that wonāt happen because God has it all figured out.
Now letās look a little further about this type of judgment which is exclusively Godās, nobody shares it with him. Letās look in Romans 2. Did you ever worry about who was going to heaven and who wasnāt? Did you ever think you knew? Let me tell you you donāt know. And if you think you know when youāre fortunate enough to make it, youāll be surprised by a lot of things. Youāll be surprised by who is there and youāll be surprised by who isnāt there too! Romans 2:16, itās just part of a sentence. Paul speaks about:
āIn the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my gospel.ā
So this judgment belongs only to God because only God knows the secret things of our lives. And then again in Romans 14:10ā12:
āBut why dost thou judge thy brother? Or why dost thou set at nought thy brother. For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ.ā
We is who? All believers. This is not the judgment of unbelievers. Itās not a judgment for condemnation because there is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ. This is a judgment of believers. Where does judgment begin? With the unbelievers or the believers? Thatās right, judgment must begin where? In the house of God. This is an example. Before the unbelievers are judged, the believers will be judged before the judgment seat, or bema, of Christ.
āFor it is written, As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God.ā
And in that judgment weāll have no alibis, weāll have no excuses and weāll not be able to misrepresent a single thing. Thatās rather solemn, isnāt it? And every one of us here who is a committed believer will stand before that judgment seat. Verse 12:
āSo then every one of us shall give account of himself to God.ā (KJV)
Iāll tell you what, when I realized that, it keeps me busy getting ready. I really donāt have time to judge other people. Verse 13:
āLet us not therefore judge one another any more: but judge this rather, that no man put a stumblingblock or an occasion to fall in his brotherās way.ā
Thatās important. Weāre going to be judged if we have made it difficult for a fellow believer. Thatās something weāll be judged for. Remember what Jesus said about those who offend the little one who believes in him? He said it would be better for them that a millstone were hung about their neck and they were cast in the depth of the sea. Because the judgment that theyāre going to confront will be terrible.
And then one more passage along that line in 2 Corinthians 5 which is very closely parallel. I think itās important that we realize that in the New Testament we are specifically told twice that we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. My personal opinion is that we do not talk enough about judgment in modern preaching. And I find whenever I study about judgment to preach about it, it does something to me. See, the one thing that modern man hates is being told heās accountable. But he is. Weāre all accountable, every one of us is accountable to God. Most modern culture and philosophy is an undercover way to reject accountability. But we canāt do it. 2Corinthians 5:9:
āWherefore we labor, that, whether present or absent, we may be accepted of him.ā
Our main endeavor is to live such a life that it would be approved by God.
āFor we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ; that every one may receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad.ā
Every one of us is going to have to account to Jesus Christ for the things weāve done in our body. And you know what I notice? Thereās just two categories of things. Good or bad. I believe when it comes to that judgment thereās nothing thatās valueless. Everything has either a positive or a negative value. Everything that is not done for the glory of God shouldnāt have been done at all. There is only one legitimate motive for anything we ever do; do all to the glory of God whether you eat or drink. Frankly I have to say I think some people would change their eating habits if they ate only to the glory of God. And the Bible says thatās what we should do. Did you know that youāre going to account for the way you eat? Itās a solemn thought, isnāt it? Verse 11:
āKnowing therefore the terror of the Lord, we persuade men; but we are made manifest unto God...ā (KJV)
I wonder how many of us do know the terror of the Lord? That was one of the chief apostles speaking, a man who had converted thousands and founded many churches. He said I live my life as one who is going to have to account to God for everything I have done. And he said in effect, it fills me with terror. So, if youāre so much more spiritual than the apostle Paul you have nothing to worry about. Believe me, if you think that way you have a lot to worry about. You havenāt even begun to understand.
Iāll go a little further and stop in a few minutes. Weāve got that clear. We are not required to judge or to make a final evaluation of the absolute value of anybody, including ourself. That was a relief to me. I discovered I didnāt have to go around assessing myself all the time. Iām not good, Iām just a poor sinner. It isnāt your business. Nor is it your business to say Iām number one, Iām the great preacher, Iām the one who always does it right. Thatās not your business.
Where are we responsible to judge? Whom and for what? Did you get that? In what areas? Which people? And for what things? Youāve got to keep the three questions there or you can be misled. Letās take the first one. To me this is logically where we begin. In a certain way we are responsible to judge ourselves. Now not to make a final evaluation but to judge ourselves by the standards of Godās word in our conduct. It seems to me that essentially every judgment that we are required to make is a judgment of conduct, not an absolute evaluation of a personās worth. Letās look in 1Corinthians 11:28ā32.
āBut let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread, and drink of that cup.ā
This is speaking about taking the Lordās Supper. Weāre warned before we do it we should examine ourselves. I believe thatās always true. I can say itās a principle with me. I never take communion without first examining myself. Because if I do or you do, weāre really endangering ourselves.
āFor he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh condemnation to himself, not discerning the Lordās body. For this cause many are weak and sickly among you, and many sleep.ā
Many have died untimely. Thatās a very solemn fact. That if we donāt examine ourselves and partake of communion weāre liable to bring upon ourselves sickness and even untimely death. Verse 31:
āFor if we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged.ā
We have the option. If we judge ourselves we preempt Godās judgment. He wonāt judge us in those areas where weāve judged ourselves.
Thereās three alternatives in descending order of goodness. Number one; judge yourself and donāt come under Godās judgment. Number two; you fail to judge yourself, you come under Godās judgment but youāre spared Godās judgment on the world. Number three; if you miss those two then youāre judged with the unbelievers. But judged somewhere each of us will be.
Now, I want to say a little bit about submission at this point and then Iāll close because I think the Lord gave me some thoughts. We judge our own conduct and our own actions by the word of God, is that right? I didnāt point out to you but we said that God the Father delegated authority to judge to the Son. The Son actually said I donāt judge anybody, itās the word that will judge. So thereās a further delegation of judgmental authority to the word of God. The ultimate standard is the word of God. So if we are to judge ourselves, by what standard are we to judge ourselves? By the same standard that God uses, the word of God. And if we judge ourselves by the word of God, bring our lives into line with the word of God, then God has nothing to judge us for. Speaking now in terms of conduct: the ultimate evaluation of our character is in eternity before the judgment seat of Christ.
Now, one of the thorny questions is to submit or not to submit. Youāve never been faced with that question? Well, Iāll speak in generalities because there are exceptions. Itās not my business tonight to single out exceptions. Basically, I believe, every Christian normally is obligated to be in submission to authority within the church. And I suspect that the majority of those that are not are what I call religious rebels. But, when you submit to authority, you donāt completely renounce all responsibility for your life. Because youāre responsible for whom you submit to. Thatās your decision and you can never pass the responsibility on to anybody else. Youāre also responsible if you donāt submit. Thatās your decision. God will hold you accountable. Whether you submit or not, and to whom you submit.
Now, Iām going to close with this thought. I suggest to you that the purpose of submission is not to hand over total responsibility for your life to somebody else. I donāt believe thatās scriptural. I would suggest that it is to share responsibility for your life with another. Wherever people would say that they are submitted to me or look to me for oversight or whatever word they want to use, I never dictate to them. Never. But Iāll say, Now listen, letās look at this thing together. If you do this, this is what will happen. If you do this, what about the scripture that says that? I would never abrogate the ultimate decision from the person Iām related to. Nor would I ever hand over the ultimate decision in my life to another. Never. But, if I recognize authority and reject whatever that authority counsels or required, Iām going to be answerable to God.
Let me say thereās a difference between conscience and convenience. If itās a matter of conscience, you have every right to say, I appeal to the supreme judgeāand before him youāll stand. But you better be careful before you do. But whether we have meetings on Sunday morning or Friday night, is not a matter of conscience. Thatās convenience. You might say, Well I donāt like meeting on Friday night. Well, maybe I donāt. But if Iām committed to this fellowship, Iām committed to its meetings. And I canāt hide behind conscience when itās convenience. You get what Iām trying to share with you? All right. I can never finally abrogate the responsibility for my own decisions. But if I decide not to submit, Iām responsible for that decision. In my opinion, in most cases itās a wrong decision.
Soāwhat? Together with the one who answers and watches for my soulādo you have somebody who watches for your soul? Iām sorry for you if you donāt. But together with that one who watches for my soul, or those ones because itās plural in the New Testament, I chart my course through life. But I never expect anybody else to take total responsibility for what I do. Does that make sense to you? I wonder if Iām communicating? You can go overboard in either direction. You can refuse to let anybody else take responsibilityāthatās wrong. Or you can dump all the responsibility and say, I wonāt even think about itāthatās wrong. Thereās a balance. I share authority over my life with others. And many, many times I would go against my own personal desire or even opinion in submission to their authority. But I would never say there is no situation in which I will never say I cannot accept that. Does that make sense to you? I hope Iāve communicated it. Iām not quite sure I have.
Let me say something else and Iām going to stop. Itās really a tricky situation about how much to let other people into your life. Isnāt it? Some people keep other people right out. Those people basically are lonely, frustrated people. See, thereās a law in the universe if you want to be fruitful youāve got to unite. Every living creature thatās going to bring forth has to unite with another creature. Thatās true spiritually. You unite with nobody, you remain sterile. But whom are you going to unite with and how far are you going to let them in? Now I have a little theory. I believe that every one of us has a Holy of Holies deep inside. The most sacred area of my personality. You know what I notice about God? He has a Holy of Holies too. And God has got strict rules about who gets into the Holy of Holies. And thereās only one way in, you know what that is? Blood. What did the blood represent? A life laid down. And I believe that you and I should do the same. We donāt admit anybody into our Holy of Holies who doesnāt come with the blood of a life laid down. I am not obligated to open up to anybody who wonāt lay his life down for me. And if you do, youāll probably regret it.
So, thereās this scriptural balance between being responsible for your own life and being accountable to others, not talking of God. And to find the balance, I think, is one of the keys to real successful Christian living.