Thursday - January 4, 2024
SCRIPTURE
James 4. 11-12
Brothers and sisters do not slander one another. Anyone who speaks against a brother or sister or judges them speaks against the law and judges it. When you judge the law, you are not keeping it, but sitting in judgment on it. There is only one Lawgiver and Judge, the one who can save and destroy. But you—who are you to judge your neighbor?
WORDS OF HOPE
Today is January 4th, the eleventh day of Christmastide, so early in the New Year, and already the daily lectionary reading is about judging each other? Shouldn’t we still be feeling the joy to the world we’ve been singing about for well over a month? The church first started compiling these daily Bible readings in the 7th century. What would they know about human nature today?
After a quick look at social media lately, I would say they knew quite a lot. I don’t know if people in those days made New Year’s resolutions but resolving to refrain from constantly judging one another should be high on most of our lists. The writer of the Book of James gets to the point right away, calling our constant judgment of one another slander, which has become an expected behavior pattern among politicians and news commentators. Though I’m trying not to judge any particular groups, their followers do reflect a definite influence in their own opinions.
Whether our behavior is focused politically or not, judgment of our neighbors has become a common practice in our society and James reminds us that judging against our sisters and brothers is judging against the law itself. To what law is he referring? Many scholars believe that the writer of this concise letter to the church was the half-brother of Jesus, and it is his own brother’s law that is being broken. What was Jesus’ only commandment to us? -To love one another…and in doing so, to love God and ourselves.
Recently, I ran across a Facebook post from one friend making highly inflammatory remarks about two other friends, turning a private dispute into a public broadcast and personal name-calling into published slander. The situation could easily become an expensive and time-wasting court case simply because of forgetting the law to love one another and this post was not an isolated case.
I could spend several more paragraphs judging social media, but resolving not to judge is a much more productive use of my time so early in the year. That will award me more time to reflect on the law of James’ brother.
PRAYER
Thank you for the gift of another New Year. May we live in your honor. Amen
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dan Peeler
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
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