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Reachout Trust
24 Ormond Road
Richmond Surrey
TW10 6TH
England

Phone & Fax:
0845 241 2158

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A company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales, number 4162936.
A registered charity number 1087085

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  Law and Judgement (James 4:11-12)
"Who are you to judge your neighbour", asks James. Well, we may as well shut up shop and go home. Reachout has lost its mandate. After all isn't judging what we do? Don't we judge this group and that to be in error about this, that and the other, and dare to act as a corrective to them? There are those who would say amen to that, those who wish we would stop, and those who believe we should stop. But what is James talking about here?

The NASB is least helpful here in beginning v.11,
"Do not speak against one another brethren". The text uses a Greek word meaning "slander" or "traduce", meaning misrepresent, or defame, to damage someone's reputation. The NIV translates, "Brothers, do not slander one another", and the NRSV has, "Do not speak evil against one another." James is not prohibiting the proper and necessary discrimination, or discernment that every Christian should exercise. Paul, in his letter to the Romans, wrote:

"I urge you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and put obstacles in your way that are contrary to the teaching you have learned. For such people are not serving our Lord Christ, but their own appetites. By smooth talk and flattery they deceive the minds of naive people" (Ro.16:17/18)

In 1 Corinthians 5&6 Paul charges Christians to appoint people to judge a dispute between believers rather than take fellow believers to law. He writes:

What business is it of mine to judge those outside the church? Are you not to judge those inside? God will judge those outside. 'Expel the wicked man from among you'" (1 Co.5:12/13)

We are clearly meant to exercise discernment, even among ourselves as believers, otherwise how are we to know the wicked man to expel him or those who cause division by false teaching?

Two Christians had a history of bad feeling, both were at fault to one degree or another but one had a conciliatory attitude while the other was judgemental. The first said, "You know, we must try and get along. One day we will be in heaven together and may be neighbours". The second replied, "I doubt very much whether you will be in heaven the way you are going!" This is what James has in mind, i.e. ultimate judgement.

Paul deals with this in Romans 14 where believers were in dispute over dietary customs. They were judging each other, one group seeming to insist that special dietary observations made them better Christians while others seemed to think that their exercising freedom to eat what they wanted put them on a better footing with God. Paul writes:

"Accept him whose faith is weak without passing judgement on disputable matters...The man who eats everything must not look down on him who does not, and the man who does not eat everything must not condemn the man who does, for God has accepted him. Who are you to judge someone else's servant? To his own master he stands or falls." (Ro.14:1-4)

As well as "disputable matters" James has in mind perhaps a number of offences, such as questioning legitimate authority, e.g. when Israel spoke against Moses they spoke against God (Nu.21:5); slandering someone secretly, with "a haughty look and an arrogant heart" (Ps.101:5); bringing false accusations (1 Pe.2:12;3:16), all sins of speech. To judge in this way, writes James, is to put ourselves above the Law because, while it is not wrong to bring wise judgement in a matter, ultimate judgement belongs to God.

As we stand before the experiences of others, even those not of the faith, we should do so with respect, even awe, because we are not in a position to judge them ultimately. Like us, their lives are a complex of thoughts and actions, fears and misgivings, hopes and aspirations, triumphs and failures and only God can read the heart, judge its intentions and put a true value on a life. As we witness lets by all means discern truth from error, telling the one and exposing the other, but let's remember also that only God can judge and give thanks for it because he alone, and no one else, will be our ultimate judge.

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