Christ the Pantocrator |
Monday after Cantate
“You
judge according to the flesh; I judge no one” (John 8:15).
To
judge according to the flesh is to judge according to the mere appearance of a
thing, or to make a decision about a thing based on human reasoning. Speaking
to the Jews in this passage, Jesus uses the term “flesh” as He does in Chapter
six when He says, “the flesh (that is, the human nature) profits nothing.[1]”
This is in contrast to how He uses the same word earlier in chapter six during
the Bread of Life discourse to describe His own flesh as real food.[2]
This is the way Paul uses the term “the flesh” in his writings. Paul writes in
Romans, “For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells;[3]”
And, to the Galatians, “And those who are Christ’s have crucified the flesh
with its passions and desires.[4]”
The term “flesh”, as Jesus uses it here refers to the sinful human nature,
which lusts against the Spirit, which two are contrary to one another.[5]
This is the standard by which the Jews are judging Jesus. They do not accept
the works He does, like healing the sick, restoring sight to the blind, and raising
the dead. They claim that Jesus is doing these miracles by the power of the
devil, that He is transgressing the Law of Moses when He heals on the Sabbath, or
that He blasphemes when He says that holy Scripture is about Him, He is the
only way to the Father, and calls Himself God.
But
in the same sentence Jesus says something we might find odd. He says that He
judges no one. If Jesus had said that, rather than judging according to the
flesh, He judged according to the Spirit, this would be more logical. But Jesus
does not say that. He says, “I judge no one.” How can this be true, especially
when we Christians confess that He will come again in glory to judge both the
living and the dead?[6]
It is God’s word that judges. Jesus alludes to this type of judgment when He tells
them, “It is also written in your law that the testimony of two men is true. I
am One who bears witness of myself, and the Father who sent Me bears witness of
Me.[7]”
They should believe what Jesus teaches because in accordance with God’s word,
Jesus has two who “bear witness” on His behalf: Himself, and God the Father.
God’s word is what judges those who refuse to believe Jesus. Jesus will later tell
His disciples, “If anyone hears My words and does not believe, I do not judge
him; for I did not come to judge the world but to save the world. He who
rejects Me, and does not receive my words, has that which judges him – the word
that I have spoken will judge him on the last day.[8]”
Christ offered life to His hearers, but their rejection would condemn them (The Lutheran
Study Bible 2009, p. 1807) .
Jesus
says that He is the light of the world, but the Jews are blind to this light
because they are judging Jesus, not by God’s Word as they believe in their legalism,
but rather according to the flesh. This is not a problem that is unique to
them. We people today are just as prone to reject Jesus as our ancient
counterparts because of our sinful human nature, and chalk it up to being
clever, sophisticated, and modern. But, we have the same sinful flesh to
contend with as they, and therefore the same inclination toward sin and away
from God. It is true of us as well: in us, that is, in our flesh, there is
nothing good. Almost 100 years ago, a man named Pieper wrote about “modern
theology”:
The moderns have nothing
to offer but human doctrine. Refusing to accept Scripture as the Word of God,
they have found it theologically unreliable and have substituted for it as the
source of doctrine the human heart, the theological Ego…They are virtually
demanding that theology be removed from the realm of divine truth into the
sphere of subjective human opinion…we shall have to insist that what the Church
needs is God’s theology and that the theology, the doctrine drawn by the
theologian from Scripture…is divine doctrine (Christian
Dogmatics 1957, p.53) .
God’s
word is true; it means what it says, and it does what it says. And it says that
Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that He was buried, and
that He rose again on the third day.[9]
It says that Jesus is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours
but also for the sins of the whole world.[10]
It says that He was the one promised, even going all the way back to the Garden,
to come and set the captives free, destroying sin, death, and the devil.[11]
It says that when we eat His body and drink His blood as he tells us to, we
have the forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation.[12]
It says that when we are baptized into Christ, we put on Christ,[13]
our sins are washed away,[14]
and we are saved all through the resurrection of Christ;[15]
that baptism connects us to His death, and consequently to His resurrection, so
it belongs to us.[16]
So repent and believe the Gospel. Let’s not judge Jesus according to the flesh,
and end up being judged ourselves by His word. Let’s not be too modern to
receive the forgiveness of sins and inherit eternal life on the Last Day, for
on that Day, all who are in their graves will hear His voice and come out, some
to everlasting life, and some to everlasting condemnation.[17]
Works Cited
Concordia Publishing House. 2009. The Lutheran Study Bible. Edited
by Edward A Engelbrecht, Paul E Deterding, Roland Cap Ehlke, Jerald C Joersz,
Mark W Love, Steven P Mueller, Scott R Murray, et al. Saint Louis, MO:
Concordia Publishing House.
Pieper,
Francis. 1957. Christian Dogmatics. Edited by Walter W. F. Albrecht.
Vol. 1. 4 vols. Saint Louis, MO: Concordia Publishing House.
[1]
John 6:63
[2]
John 6:55
[3]
Romans 7:18
[4]
Galatians 5:24
[5]
Galatians 5:17
[6]
John 5:28-30
[7]
John 8:17-18
[8]
John 12:47-48
[9] 1
Corinthians 15
[10] 1
John 2:2
[11]
Luke 4:16-22
[12]
Matthew 26:28; 1 Corinthians 11:23-29
[13]
Galatians 3:27
[14]
Acts 22:16
[15] 1
Peter 3:18-22
[16]
Romans 6:3-11
[17]
John 5:29
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