From the series “The Commands of Christ — Love in Action”
“Do not judge, so that you will not be judged.”
— Matthew 7:1, NASB 1995
This verse has become one of the most misused and misunderstood words of Christ—quoted by those who reject accountability and often avoided by those who are called to speak truth. But Jesus was not forbidding judgment. He was forbidding hypocrisy.
He was not calling His people to silence.
He was calling them to purity of heart before speaking.
“Why do you look at the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye?”
— Matthew 7:3
The command is not “never judge,” but “judge with righteous judgment.” (John 7:24)
To love as Christ commands is to speak truth—not with pride, but with humility.
Not with arrogance, but with a heart willing to be examined first.
Hypocritical judgment crushes.
It condemns without compassion.
It sees clearly in others but is blind to its own sin.
It says, “Let me fix you,” while refusing to be sanctified.
“First take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s eye.”
— Matthew 7:5
This is not a call to silence truth—it is a call to truth that flows from repentance.
The early Church knew this danger.
They preached boldly—but they also examined themselves continually.
They spoke of sin—but never from superiority.
Clement of Rome (c. AD 96):
“Let each of us examine himself first… for judgment must begin with the household of God.”
— 1 Clement, Ch. 56
The Didache (c. AD 50–100):
“Do not hate any man; but some you are to reprove, and others to pray for. Yet do nothing without examining yourself first.”
— Didache, Ch. 2–3
Judgment without self-awareness is dangerous.
Correction without humility is damaging.
But silence in the name of comfort is not love—it is cowardice.
To obey Christ here is to walk a narrow path:
We are called to confront sin with clean hands and a broken heart.
We are called to uphold righteousness without self-righteousness.
We are called to correct others only as those who are also under correction.
So before we speak, we must kneel.
Before we confront, we must repent.
And if we are unwilling to let God deal with us first, we have no business pointing at the sins of others.
Because love does not seek to shame.
Love seeks to restore.
And judgment without mercy is not Kingdom love—it is Pharisaical pride.
📚 Sources & References
Do Not Judge Hypocritically
Scripture (NASB 1995):
- Matthew 7:1–5 – “Do not judge… first take the log out of your own eye…”
- John 7:24 – “Do not judge according to appearance, but judge with righteous judgment.”
Ante-Nicene Sources:
- Clement of Rome, 1 Clement, Ch. 56.
“Let each of us examine himself first… judgment must begin with the household of God.”
[Available at: NewAdvent.org] - The Didache, Chapters 2–3.
“Do not hate… do nothing without examining yourself first.”
[Available at: EarlyChristianWritings.com]
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