Central Shelby
Church of Christ


 

 
Do We Have All The Facts?

Betty was hopping mad. A friend of hers had overheard a telephone conversation between her boyfriend Bob and another person, and -- well, Betty’s friend spared no details of what she had heard; and from what Betty’s friend told her, Bob was looking like a deceptive, mean, selfish, egotistic excuse for a man! So based on her friend's words, Betty broke off her relationship with Bob, and moved away. The only problem with all this was that Betty’s “friend” (and we use that term loosely) had overheard only PART of the implicating dialogue between Bob and this other. The truth of the matter was, Bob was completely innocent of all the crimes Betty though he'd been guilty of. To make a long story short, Bob and Betty renewed their relationship when she happened upon some information that cleared up the whole situation.

Alright -- I admit the above was part of the plot to an old Bing Crosby movie I watched the other night. But the scene reminded me so much of how we humans tend to react (or should I say, overreact) to lopsided, incomplete information, “answering a matter before we hear it“ (Prov. 18:13).

Jesus said, “Do not judge according to appearance, but judge with righteous judgment” (John 7:24). Such a statement implies that at times it just might be possible that we don't have all the information we ought to have in order to form a judgment about a certain situation or person. It means we should not be hasty in forming character assessments.

What compounds our sin even more is when we pass our hastily formed opinions on to others. Such is called “slander.” Slander is “a false report meant to do harm to the good name and reputation of another...the spreading of false reports about persons,” and it is sin. He who rebelliously engages in such will not enter into heaven on the judgment day, but rather will be cast into hell (1 Cor.6:9-10; Romans 1:28-32; Rev.21:8). It is serious.

Our Lord didn’t simply give us instructions about not judging according to appearance -- He as well lovingly counseled us concerning the means by which to judge righteously. He said, “Moreover, if your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault between you and him alone” (Matthew 18:15). In other words, we aren't to keep to ourselves, festering in the knowledge of what we think our brother has done. Nor are we to spread what we know (or don’t know) about our brother’s supposed sin. Rather, we are to GO TO HIM. After talking with him we will then be able to better make a “righteous judgment.

Love...believes all things, hopes all things” (1 Cor.13:7). The Christian who loves his brother will give him the benefit of the doubt until he is presented with irrefutable facts to the contrary -- information that goes deeper than mere “appearance.” He will express his love and concern for him by talking to him -- not to others -- about his perceived condition. He will “judge with righteous judgment.”

--Mike Noble


 

 
 

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October 28, 2009

Central Shelby Church of Christ
1118 Burks Branch Road
P.O. Box 445
Shelbyville, Kentucky  40066
Phone:  (502) 647-9179