Judging First Corinthians
I've been reading through the ever-controversial 1 Corinthians lately (as opposed to the rest of the Bible, which isn't controversial at all, right?) , and something struck me that I'd never really digested before. On the surface, it would seem that Paul is talking out of both sides of his mouth:
1 Cor. 4:5 - "Therefore judge nothing before the appointed time; wait till the Lord comes."
1 Cor. 5:12 - "Are you not to judge those inside the church?" (implied answer: yes).
On the one hand we're told not to judge, on the other, we're told to judge. Granted, the context of the two verses above is very different. In the first, Paul is speaking about judging himself as a faithful teacher of the gospel; in the second, he speaks about judging an "immoral brother" among the church at Corinth. A deeper look I'm sure could resolve the apparent conflict, but it brought to my mind the deeper issue of judgment in the Bible.
Is there 'bad' judgment and 'good' judgment? The teaching of the Bible seems clear enough that we're not to pass judgment on others; in so doing, we condemn ourselves, because we don't even live to the standard by which we judge others (c.f., Mt. 7:1-5, Rom. 2:1-2). But how does this square with verses like 1 Cor. 5:12?
Perhaps one distinction is that 1 Cor. 5 is dealing with those who call themselves Christians (brothers) in the church. So are we to judge those within but not without? I would venture to guess that the spirit of judgment comes into play here as well: are our judgments done in a spirit of (1) humility, and (2) such as way as to aim for restoration and repentace for the offending brother or sister? (c.f., 1 Cor. 5:5).
Anyway, plenty to write and discuss here, but that should be sufficient fodder to start. The issue of judgment has always been a sticky one for me. In the end, I suppose walking in the Spirit is the only real solution when discerning such matters. Go figure :)
1 Cor. 4:5 - "Therefore judge nothing before the appointed time; wait till the Lord comes."
1 Cor. 5:12 - "Are you not to judge those inside the church?" (implied answer: yes).
On the one hand we're told not to judge, on the other, we're told to judge. Granted, the context of the two verses above is very different. In the first, Paul is speaking about judging himself as a faithful teacher of the gospel; in the second, he speaks about judging an "immoral brother" among the church at Corinth. A deeper look I'm sure could resolve the apparent conflict, but it brought to my mind the deeper issue of judgment in the Bible.
Is there 'bad' judgment and 'good' judgment? The teaching of the Bible seems clear enough that we're not to pass judgment on others; in so doing, we condemn ourselves, because we don't even live to the standard by which we judge others (c.f., Mt. 7:1-5, Rom. 2:1-2). But how does this square with verses like 1 Cor. 5:12?
Perhaps one distinction is that 1 Cor. 5 is dealing with those who call themselves Christians (brothers) in the church. So are we to judge those within but not without? I would venture to guess that the spirit of judgment comes into play here as well: are our judgments done in a spirit of (1) humility, and (2) such as way as to aim for restoration and repentace for the offending brother or sister? (c.f., 1 Cor. 5:5).
Anyway, plenty to write and discuss here, but that should be sufficient fodder to start. The issue of judgment has always been a sticky one for me. In the end, I suppose walking in the Spirit is the only real solution when discerning such matters. Go figure :)