“Do not judge according to appearance, but
judge with righteous judgment.”
(John 7:24)
Thoughts… People were making judgments about Jesus, and as we see in John 7, for a growing number of them, those judgments were not very positive. In fact, opposition and outright hostility were increasing, which ultimately, would lead his death.
That’s the way it was with Jesus. You either loved him or hated him—there was no neutral ground. Being around Jesus demanded a position on one end of the spectrum or the other, but staying in the middle was not an option.
To arrive at an opinion of Jesus, a judgment had to be made. Sadly, those who rejected him formed judgments that were not based in righteousness and truth. Their judgments were based on the fact that Jesus had made them uncomfortable. He had challenged their traditions. His ministry had colored outside the lines of established theology. His way of doing things didn’t look like theirs. Why, he even had the audacity to actually heal someone in dire need on the Sabbath—and they didn’t like that one bit!
Never one to shy away from controversy and confrontation, Jesus challenged their attitudes toward him as well as their approach to life in general. He called them to reject this judgment-by-appearance mindset that was keeping them from seeing God’s truth for a view of life as seen through the lens of righteousness. Learning to make righteous judgments would make all the difference in their world—it would lead them to see God in the daily details of their world, and in the end, would lead to eternal life.
Unfortunately, most of the people in Jesus’ day rejected what he had to say. But the story is not meant to end there. Jesus’ challenge to “judge with righteous judgment” also calls us to reexamine the way we arrive at the judgments we make and the opinions we hold, and honestly ask ourselves whether they are based on appearance or rooted in righteousness.
We form judgments and opinions every day—perhaps every hour—about the people we encounter, the events we observe, and the world we live in. Every moment of our day presents opportunity to either embrace or reject the work of God that awaits us in those people and events. It all depends on how we form our judgments.
If we will learn to root our judgments, opinions and attitudes in righteousness rather than mere appearance, we will discover Jesus in the daily ordinariness of life.
Prayer… Father, help me to practice your presence in the daily ordinariness of my life. Teach me to make righteous judgments so that I might be see you in every person I meet, every event I take in, every plan I execute, and in every detail of my world.
One More Thing… “We need a baptism of clear seeing. We desperately need seers who can see through the mist—Christian leaders with prophetic vision. Unless they come soon it will be too late for this generation. And if they do come we will no doubt crucify a few of them in the name of our worldly orthodoxy.” —A.W. Tozer
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