The Law of Judgment never Changes

by | Jun 23, 2026

Am I judging others by their failures while expecting God to judge me by His grace, or am I extending the same mercy that I have received through Jesus Christ?
Scripture: “For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you.” — Matthew 7:2 NIV
• “You, therefore, have no excuse, you who pass judgment on someone else, for at whatever point you judge another, you are condemning yourself, because you who pass judgment do the same things.” — Romans 2:1 NIV

Three powerful points stand out in Matthew 7:2 and Romans 2:1:

1. The Measure We Use Becomes the Measure We Receive (Matthew 7:2)

Jesus reveals an unchanging Kingdom principle: the standard we apply to others becomes the standard applied to us.
• If we are merciful, we position ourselves to receive mercy.
• If we are harsh, critical, and condemning, we invite the same measure back upon ourselves.
• The issue is not merely what we say about others, but the attitude of heart from which we evaluate them.

Key Truth: The way I treat others reveals the standard I am asking God to use toward me.

2. What We Condemn in Others Reveals What Is Hidden in Us (Romans 2:1)

The apostle Paul emphasizes that the faults we are quickest to recognize in others expose areas of weakness, pride, or potential failure within our own hearts.
• God sees not only actions but motives and possibilities within the heart.
• Criticism frequently reveals more about the critic than the one being criticized.
• Spiritual maturity begins when we allow God to search us before we attempt to correct others.\

Key Truth: Before asking, “What’s wrong with them?” ask, “What is God trying to show me about my own heart?”

3. The Cross Is the Only Ground for Humility and Mercy (Matthew 7:1; Romans 2:1)

The truth is that the realization that none of us would want God to judge us exactly as we judge others.
• Without the grace of Christ, every one of us stands guilty.
• The saint’s response is humility: “Except for the grace of God, I could be guilty of the same thing.”
• Jesus judges believers through the provision of His atonement, not merely by their failures.

Key Truth: Because Jesus has shown me mercy through His Cross, I am free—and obligated—to show mercy to others.

How do we follow Jesus in this principle: The next time I notice a fault in someone, pause and pray: “Jesus, search our heart first. Thank You for Your mercy toward us. Help us respond to others with the same grace You have shown us.”
• This transforms judgment into humility, criticism into compassion, and offense into an opportunity to reflect the heart of Christ. This is the “how” we are to rule and reign with Him with awe, reverence and fear!

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