Who am I to Judge my Neighbor?

Brothers and sisters, do not slander one another. Anyone who speaks against a brother or sister[d] or judges them speaks against the law and judges it. When you judge the law, you are not keeping it, but sitting in judgment on it. There is only one Lawgiver and Judge, the one who is able to save and destroy. But you—who are you to judge your neighbor?

James 4:11-12

The last sentence makes this paragraph come to life for at first it might seem like James is headed in a different direction. He isn’t speaking so much of slander and arguing here, he is speaking about judging others. Interesting isn’t it that this comes where it does as the end of the whole passage, a passage that began talking about how we fight with one another.

Yes, that’s right, we started with fighting and quarrels and finish with an admonition not to judge…

In our day, many people like to complain about being “judged.” “Don’t you judge me!” they yell, while judging the other person a bigot of some sort. Very frequently, this is teamed up with another word: “tolerant” or more to the point, “intolerant.”  So, we hear over and over that we must not judge therefore we must be tolerant of everything. Is James going politically correct on us?

Not a chance!

The contemporary politically charged view on ‘judging’ and ‘tolerance’ is entirely an earthly view, usually relared to a political narrative. What has James told us about such things just a few short verses back? James is not writing this letter to the non-Christian world; he has directed it to Christians who are supposed to know better. When he tells us not to judge others, he doesn’t imply that any one of us who is doing wrong can turn the tables to justify wrongdoing. Instead, he is telling us that we need to respect God’s authority to judge.

For me to judge one of my brothers or sisters in Christ means that I have taken upon myself the authority to pass condemnation upon the other person, and that is a direct affront to God, who reserves all such decisions for Himself.  Thus, when we heap condemnation on one another, we are the ones in the wrong.

Suppose I see a brother who is engaged in sin, do I help him by calling him names or saying bad things behind his back? How can that possibly restore him in his relationship with God or with others? If, on the hand, I have invested time and effort into having a relationship of mutual trust and respect between us, I may be able to help him see his error and gently guide him back to where he should be… and perhaps in the future he will help me out when I am adrift: This is love in action. If I don’t have that kind of relationship with him, I can probably find out who does… See the difference?

Take just a moment to consider the implications of this; go back and read the text from 4:1 and ask yourself why James put this last, where the “bottom line” is usually found. Who am I to judge my neighbor? All those quarrels, being a friend of this world, not having prayer answered,  grief and mourning… and they end up with who am I to judge others?

What is God telling you in these verses?

(I think He just might be telling me that I need to think before I speak.)

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Housebuilding

Saying 21

By wisdom a house is built,
    and through understanding it is established;
through knowledge its rooms are filled
    with rare and beautiful treasures.

Proverbs 24:3-4

We had two verses on destruction yesterday, and happily, we have two on building up. In this example we see how wisdom has with it the power or ability to build a house and establish a home; you never see these attributes mentioned with the wicked. Notice the relationship in these verses between wisdom, understanding and knowledge; they fit together like a hand in a glove. At the same time, folly, destruction, ruin and foolishness do the same.

The message in all of this is that no person needs to be a fool, and all of us may strive toward wisdom: The way there is to obtain knowledge and understanding, and then apply those wisely, all the while staying clear of fools.

If only it was as easily done as it is to say.

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And so what do we see?

When we gaze up into the clear night sky, what do we see?  When we are far away from the city lights and we look upward, what can we learn?

Can we learn as much by looking around the natural beauty of the earth? What about looking into a microscope and seeing the amazing complexity of a single living cell?

Yes, we can, for these all proclaim the glory of God!

We can hardly gaze upon Creation without coming to see the very handiwork of the Creator Himself… and yet millions see nothing. How very sad.

The heavens declare the glory of God;
    the skies proclaim the work of his hands.
Day after day they pour forth speech;
    night after night they reveal knowledge.
They have no speech, they use no words;
    no sound is heard from them.
Yet their voice goes out into all the earth,
    their words to the ends of the world.
In the heavens God has pitched a tent for the sun.

Psalm 19:1-4

How hard it must be to see the handiwork of God and still deny it; how miserable the life that seeks to be without purpose.  How great the burden must be to carry the obligation of denial.

 For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.

Romans 1:20

How can we take any pleasure in observing the folly of men who seek to deny the obvious?  How can we simply see such people as debating opponents?

The poor souls who would deny God’s glory need to hear the truth; and if we will not be inspired by God’s glory that is all around us to share His Truth… then who will be?

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Wicked Ways

Saying 20

Do not envy the wicked,
    do not desire their company;
for their hearts plot violence,
    and their lips talk about making trouble.

Proverbs 24:1-2

Once again this is clear enough; I shouldn’t have to say much…

The main point is that we shouldn’t envy or desire to be like wicked, and thus we should not hang out with them. SeeV. 19; Psalm 37:1; 73:3; Proverbs 1:15; 3:31; 23:17.

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Have Mercy O Lord! redux

There are times when I am just amazed at how God has blessed us, take this picture as an example…

There in the sage blossoms somewhere is a really big bee, that’s what I was trying to get a picture of, but he wouldn’t hold still.  Moreover, he didn’t mess with me either.  You’ll notice the dog just sitting out there, he had a sore leg that day and the rabbit that I posted about a little ways back had given up on playing with him and gone off into those bushes back there in the corner. So, this is a picture of a beautiful spring afternoon in the back yard, you might even call it a carefree afternoon…

Do you ever wonder how you could be so fortunate?  Why did God pick me to favor?  I am nothing but a sinner and someone who really hasn’t made the most of all that God has given me, and yet He has blessed me anyway; amazing!

Have mercy on me, O God,
    according to your unfailing love; 
according to your great compassion 
    blot out my transgressions. 
Wash away all my iniquity
    and cleanse me from my sin.

Psalm 51:1-2

These verses well sum this all up: God has had mercy on me, how about you?  There’s an interesting tidbit I’d like to point out in verse 1… see where it says “according to your unfailing love“? The Hebrew word rendered “unfailing love” is hesed which means “covenant-keeping”. Our God is a “covenant-keeping” God who has entered relationship with us through Covenant, in our case the New Covenant which takes sin away.  Accordingly, He does not see our faults and failures; He just loves us!  If you are ever having a bad day, this is something to remember, for if that doesn’t brighten up your perspective, what will?

God’s unfailing love (covenant-keeping) is the one thing that can turn my doubt and sorrows into joyous thanksgiving any day!

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Photo of the Week: May 6, 2026

RT 5-2015 269-A-LP
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Too Much Wine

Saying 19

Who has woe? Who has sorrow?
    Who has strife? Who has complaints?
    Who has needless bruises? Who has bloodshot eyes?
Those who linger over wine,
    who go to sample bowls of mixed wine.
Do not gaze at wine when it is red,
    when it sparkles in the cup,
    when it goes down smoothly!
In the end it bites like a snake
    and poisons like a viper.
Your eyes will see strange sights,
    and your mind will imagine confusing things.
You will be like one sleeping on the high seas,
    lying on top of the rigging.
“They hit me,” you will say, “but I’m not hurt!
    They beat me, but I don’t feel it!
When will I wake up
    so I can find another drink?”

Proverbs 23:29-35

Saying 19 is the longest of the 30 sayings, and it brings with it quite an indictment that is so very clear and obvious that it requires no further comment from me.

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On bended knee

Come, let us bow down in worship, 
   let us kneel before the LORD our Maker; 
 for he is our God 
   and we are the people of his pasture, 
   the flock under his care.

Psalm 95:6-7

Abraham Lincoln one said that there are times when he found himself falling to his knees before God, for there was no other place for him to go during the darkest days of Civil War.  I think there are times like that for all of us.

We don’t even need to endure bad times to respond in this way; there are times to jump for joy to the Lord, and there are times to fall on our knees in thanksgiving as well.

The most important thing, whether we are living in good times or bad, is to remember that we need to be near to God…

God is my joy and my sustenance; my happiness and my comfort.

God is my life and my strength; my creator and my redeemer.

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To Remain Faithful

Saying 18

My son, give me your heart
    and let your eyes delight in my ways,
for an adulterous woman is a deep pit,
    and a wayward wife is a narrow well.
Like a bandit she lies in wait
    and multiplies the unfaithful among men.

Proverbs 23:26-28

Since v. 27 begins with the explanatory word “for”, this verse is introducing what that and later verses develop; namely, a solemn warning against the temptation of infidelity in marriage (a subject to which earlier sections devoted much material: 5: 1-23; 6:20-35; 7:1-27). Notice, too, that the passages in chapters 5, 6, 7 are always introduced with a similar getting of the son’s attention before beginning the actual material, to impress the son with what the father was saying.

Temptation is given a double description, both of which resemble: a “deep ditch” and a “narrow pit”. This represents a danger to avoid. Proverbs 22:14 similarly says, “The mouth of an adulterous woman is a deep pit; a man who is under the Lord’s wrath falls into it.” Since there is nothing to gain by falling into a deep ditch and a narrow pit, Proverbs 6:32 rightfully says, “But a man who commits adultery has no sense; whoever does so destroys himself.” Look at the dangers brought on by one’s disregarding this warning: Proverbs 5:11; 6:32-34; 7:22,23,26,27.

“She” is out working her trade (Proverbs 7:12). Like a robber she does not lose an opportunity (Proverbs 7:13-21). Men who thus become unfaithful to wives, or vice versa, might well be described as “treacherous”. Malachi shows that men who turn from the wives of their youth deal “treacherously” with them (Malachi 2: 10,14-16).

As I read all these verses about infidelity, I’m struck by two things: First, these verses always place the “son” in the position of being so terribly innocent, and the women as being wicked and calculating. I think that we can agree that this isn’t the typical situation in real life, then or now. The Scriptures are written this way for several purely cultural reasons which I have discussed several times before on this blog. The real message is that adultery is something that a person can slip into easily if they aren’t careful.

The second thing is that, in spite of the fact that we can see right away that blaming the whole problem on the wicked woman, our culture tends to blame it all on the wicked man, and that is just as obviously untrue. As I’ve said so many times both in classes and here on the blog, all those wicked men are with someone while they are cheating, and a great many of those “someones” are busy cheating on their husbands or boyfriends.

Neither men nor women have sole claim to innocence or wickedness; we all are subject to human failings and should be on guard against it.

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Finding Inspiration

may9-005

Where can a person go to find inspiration; where do we go to be filled with grace?

Maybe a better question would be, “What kind of inspiration do we search for?”

An artist or a musician may look for inspiration in a wholly different place than a bank robber, and a politician would possibly look in a different place than an industrialist.  So here, we deal with where regular every day Christians go for inspiration…

Some people find inspiration in beautiful scenes from nature, others might find it in reading about great and faithful leaders of the past, or people who are making a difference for Christ right now.  Some read blogs for inspiration, and there are many wonderful and inspiring blog posts to be found out there.

Of course, the best place for a Christian to find inspiration to continue the “good fight” is in the pages of the Word of God, for there is nowhere else that we can find the actual mind of God…

If we have a firm foundation in the Bible, we can find inspiration wherever we look.  It’s a funny thing, but we usually find the thing we are looking for.  Have you ever noticed that when you get a new car you suddenly see the same model of car everywhere?  Have you ever noticed that people who are looking to be offended can find offense in everything you say, or that people who have dirty minds see dirty things wherever they look?

God is active everywhere; in nature, in city streets, in Scripture, in the arts…

If our mindset is upon “the things that are above” inspiration is all around us.  The only thing in the universe that we have control over is our own mind.  Thus, we can set our minds on heavenly things and find inspiration wherever we set our eyes, and I don’t know about you, but I am truly thankful for that.

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