Alisa Childers
  • Blog
    • Comments Policy
  • Popular Posts
  • alisachilders.com

Biblical Judgment in a "Don't Judge Me" World

10/8/2020

1 Comment

 
Picture

​I'm over all Well Watered Women today with a post I've been wanting write for a while. Check it out:

​
"YOU SHOULDN'T JUDGE."

Once upon a couple of years ago, there was a wildly popular book written by a self-professed Christian author. It was released by a Christian publishing house and marketed on Christian platforms and websites. It was a fairy tale come true. Crushing it at the top of The New York Times Best Seller list and winning the hearts and minds of millions of women, it was featured in countless small group Bible studies and conferences nationwide.
​
 
The only problem is that the core message of the book is the exact opposite of the biblical Gospel. So, I decided to write a little review of it and post it on my blog. I didn’t anticipate this “little review” going viral, nor did I predict the boatloads of hate mail that would sail into my inbox in the following weeks. 
Some of the emails cannot be repeated in polite company. But the bulk of the pushback can be distilled down to three fateful words: “You. Shouldn’t. Judge.” 

The message I received loud and clear was that it was wrong of me to criticize unbiblical ideas in a popular book. After all, Jesus would never be such a “McJudgypants.” With love redefined to mean the affirmation of a desire or an idea, it’s easy to see how “judging” has become the unforgivable sin in our culture.  

But Christians live by a different standard than the world. When someone says, “You shouldn’t judge,” they are actually contradicting real love, the Bible, and plain common sense. So, the next time someone pulls out this particular conversation-stopper, remember these three things: 
​


SAYING “DON’T JUDGE” IS NOT BIBLICAL.

It seems like everyone’s favorite Bible verse (at least when they’re trying to keep someone from telling them they’re wrong) is Matthew 7:1. The words, “Judge not, that you be not judged,” come from the lips of Jesus himself. 

Mic drop. End of conversation—right?

Well, that only works if you scribble out the next six verses, along with some other things Jesus said, and a good portion of the New Testament.  CONTINUE READING AT WELL WATERED WOMEN


Become a Patron!
1 Comment
Penny Noyes link
10/21/2020 08:50:30 am

I love this so much! We are warned that judging others will result in our being judged but we shouldn’t be afraid of being judged if we have first repented of our sins and we have taken the speck out of our own eye. A judgement can be good or bad—being on Top Chef is a chance to be judged, entering a talent show, or going to court can result in a good judgment or it can result in condemnation. A judgement can help us be better writers, pastry chefs or drivers.

Reply

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

    Picture
    Become a Patron!
    Picture

    RSS Feed

    alisachilders.com
  • Blog
    • Comments Policy
  • Popular Posts
  • alisachilders.com