I had the privilege of preaching in seminary chapel
yesterday. One of the great blessings of my current ministry is that I get to
teach seminarians each week and preach in the chapel regularly. I often try to
preach from texts of Scripture that I think will help shape the ministry
mindset of future pastors and missionaries. Yesterday, I chose to preach from
Matthew 7:1-5 and urge the men to guard themselves against the hypocritical
mindset which the Lord confronts there.
The first part of verse 1 is perhaps one of the most often
quoted and misused texts of Scripture. “Do not judge” is an oft-abused trump
card in debates. It seems clear that Jesus is not against judgment, but against
a certain kind of judgment. The context makes that clear–just a few verses later
He tells them to watch out for false prophets and that they can know them by
their fruits, something which obviously requires the exercise of judgment. John
7:24 is helpful in differentiating the two kinds of judgment, “Do not judge by
appearances, but judge with right judgment.” Jesus is confronting a wrong kind
of judging in Matthew 7:1-5, not all judgment.
The righteousness that Jesus expects of His followers is
evidenced by a genuine concern about sin that looks first at ourselves, then
outward to help others. Phony, hypocritical concern about sin doesn’t deal with
our own first, it focuses on the sins of others. My charge to the future
pastors and missionaries was simply to not allow that phony spirit to invade
their lives or ministries. If we, as leaders, are going to be genuinely serious
about sin, then that starts by looking at ourselves in the mirror of God’s
Word.
It is much easier to point out where others are falling
short than to admit and address our own errors. As leaders, though, refusing to
acknowledge and act to correct our failures not only reveals a flaw in our
character, it undermines the credibility of our claims to be concerned about
wrong. How can anybody take the claim that we want to do what is right (by
dealing with other people’s problems) when it is obvious that we don’t (by not
dealing with our own)?
Few things, from my vantage point, undermine the leadership
of parents, pastors, or ministries more than this kind of hypocrisy. The parent
who quickly and strongly rebukes a child for wrong, while ignoring his or her
own failures as a parent eventually loses the trust of the child. A pastor who
confronts sin in the lives of church members, but fails to confront it in
himself undermines his own spiritual leadership. A ministry or organization,
for example, that exists chiefly to point out the disobedience of other people
and ministries, but refuses to correct its own failures as aggressively loses
its credibility by demonstrating that obedience isn’t really the controlling
principle which governs it.
Jesus answer for judgmentalism is not to reject proper
judgment, but to exercise it first with regard to ourselves. If we really care
about sin, we’ll deal with the beams before we talk about specks. We’ll start
in the mirror, not in somebody else’s eye.
Theologically
Driven by: Dave Doran
Contributors
Detroit Baptist
Theological Seminary
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