This was ridiculous. Aggravating. Frustrating. Offensive. To be chased down and accused of something they hadn’t done was the epitome of insulting. Especially by friends. Men they considered brothers. People who were supposed to have their backs in battle. Instead, they were pursuing them at breakneck speed. Making assumptions. Jumping to conclusions. Hurling accusations. Having screeched to a halt before the men of Gilead with barely a cursory greeting, the leaders of Israel began their diatribe. They had heard about the altar built by the Jordan River. They had seen it themselves as they passed. They were appalled. Aghast. Angry. Able to build up a full head of steam on the journey, the ten leaders of Israel had a lot of words for the men of Reuben, Gad, and the half-tribe of Manasseh.
Barely had they come to a halt before accusations began pouring from their lips. They knew what the moving tribes were up to. They knew they had evil intentions. It was obvious they were already straying from the commands of God. Well. The remaining ten tribes weren’t having it. At all. As they spoke, their people were sharpening swords and shining armor, preparing for battle. That altar was worth fighting over. Because they were scared. Terrified, really. Not so much because they were affronted by the building of a new altar or that the people might decide to offer sacrifices there rather than as required on the altar at the Tabernacle. Not really. This fear was personal. Rooted in history. Deeply established in self-preservation. The ten tribes left on the other side of the Jordan were beside themselves with fear that the consequences of another man’s sin would be visited on them all. Like it had in the past. At Peor. At Ai.
At Peor, twenty-four thousand people died because the men of Israel became distracted and enamored by foreign women and drawn into idol worship. At Ai, an entire family had been killed because one man, Achan, had coveted, stolen, and hidden articles God said to leave alone. It seemed whenever someone in Israel sinned, others got caught up in the punishment. It was terrifying. Horrifying. And the current leaders of Israel weren’t having it. They were completely uninterested in being caught in that net. They didn’t want to suffer. They didn’t want to die. They didn’t want their families to either. In fear of the supposed outcome to their imagined situation, the ten men had worked up an entire scenario in which they were all in danger because of this newly constructed altar. Driven by this angst, they approached the men of Reuben, Gad, and the half-tribe of Manassah with a volley of presumptive words when a calm, clarifying question would do. (Numbers 25: Joshua 7)
There didn’t need to be a big confrontation. No one needed to ride in, verbal guns blazing. It wasn’t like that. At all. They had completely misread the situation. There was no treachery involved. No nefarious intentions implied. Although it was true they had built a large, imposing altar, the builders had no intention of offering sacrifices to God or anyone else there. It wasn’t for sacrificing animals or burning offerings. They weren’t descending into immorality and idolatry. They hadn’t sinned against God now, and they weren’t planning to do so in the future. No. This altar wasn’t about sacrifices and offerings. It was about remembrances. For them. For their descendants in Gilead. For the remaining tribes of Israel and their descendants on the other side of the Jordan. The altar was meant to remind them that they belonged to God. All of them. To the same God. All of them should be granted access to the Tabernacle altar. No matter their street address or country of origin. No one should be barred, banned, or denied access to the Tabernacle. Ever.
Admittedly, building the symbolic altar had been an afterthought. After they packed and loaded. After they left. After they put enough miles behind them that going back to hammer out any details was inconvenient. After they had time to travel in silence and let their minds wander. That’s when they started to think that perhaps, someday, maybe the children of the people they left behind would claim sole use of the temple. They would say the children of Reuben, Gad, and the half-tribe of Manasseh didn’t belong, couldn’t be part, weren’t welcome. It frightened them. Worried them. So the memorial altar had come into being. As a symbol. A reminder. A place to acknowledge that, no matter what side of the Jordan they inhabited, no matter whose tribe they were from, no matter if they visited the Tabernacle every week or twice annually, they were all God’s people. Every single one of them.
Clearly, their plan backfired. Although the builder’s intentions were benign, their pursuers were unconvinced. They viewed that alter in the worst possible light. Their minds went straight there, in fact, as if they were looking for a reason to judge the men of Reuben, Gad, and the half-tribe of Manasseh and find them worthy of excommunication. It is all said in their approach. The way they stormed into the camp, making accusations based on assumptions with no real evidence to back up their claims. Usurping God’s duties, they crowned themselves judge, jury, and executioner. They were ready to go to war! Without asking questions. Without getting the facts. Without the capacity to know and read the hearts and minds of the accused. The men from the remaining ten tribes of Israel just made things up as they went along, carried by fear, and nearly declared war on innocent people. (Joshua 22)
If you aren’t squirming in your seat by now, you probably should be. We have all been there. Every single one of us. We judge on what we see and pretend full comprehension of what we can’t see or possibly know. We covetously judge on outward appearance. The size of someone’s house. The flash of their car. The size of their wedding ring. We look at tables to which we weren’t invited, and jealously judge the people who have been. We pretentiously judge responses we can’t possibly understand. We self-righteously judge choices made by people whose life experiences differ drastically from ours. Frightened to exit our comfort zones and pre-determined notions of what Christianity and church should look like, we judge the people who have courage to extend grace, offer kindness, show love, embrace differences, and overcome divisions when we aren’t brave enough to step out and do so.
Over the years of my life, I have heard this type of judgment called, “fruit inspection.” It’s a play on Jesus’ words stating that Christ followers will be obvious by their fruits. It is true. The fruits of the Spirit will be evident in those who truly know and follow Jesus. Their feet won’t run to do evil. Their tongues won’t race to share gossip. They won’t share assumptions built on too little evidence garnered from their own jaundiced opinion. They won’t be quick to tell everything they know about everyone they know to anyone eagerly willing to listen. They also won’t judge others. At all. Not even as “fruit inspectors.” (Matthew 7:15-20; Galatians 5:22-23; Proverbs 1:10,16; James 3:6; 4:11-12; Romans 2:1, 14:13)
You see, true followers of God know that judging isn’t their job. It’s God’s. He is the just Judge. Of everyone. He knows the thoughts and intentions of every heart. Even theirs. He doesn’t need any of us to don our black robes and pick up our gavels. In His courtroom, our opinion is superfluous to the requirement. The only opinion that matters is God’s. And true people of God, those who seek after His heart, who walk daily in His footsteps, know this. They also know that they, too, will stand before the bench in that very same courtroom. A verdict will be read over them. And they intentionally live in such a way that it will clearly say, “Well done.” (I Peter 1:17; Psalm 96:13; I Chronicles 28:9; Hebrews 4:12)
That courtroom verdict is the reason we do the things we do, make the choices we make, school our thoughts, and watch our words. It is why, in a world that encourages us to make our own assumptions, draw our own conclusions, build our own accusations, and openly share our opinions, we must choose to let our words be few. It is why we must actively ignore societal norms and magnanimously extend grace, offer mercy, exude love. It is the reason we must sternly admonish ourselves to mind our own business and admit that we have no capacity to identify motives, assign emotions, or determine desires based on what we see or what gossip we hear. It is the reason we must actively resist the urge to judge others. At all. It is a solemn reminder that there is only one just Judge, only One who gets it right every time, only One who decides fairly. God. And it is His job to do, not ours. Our job is to focus on our own hearts and lives and words. Our job is to weigh our own actions against the commands of God. Our job is to listen to the needs of others, the stories of others, carry the pain of others, with love, out of love, in love. Without judgment. Because love listens. (Ecclesiastes 5:2; II Corinthians 13:5)
Had the leaders of the tribes of Israel simply asked for the truth and settled in to listen, Joshua 22 would be a shorter chapter. Those men said a lot of words before they shut up and listened to the truth of the situation. They threw a lot of accusations. Made a lot of judgments. Set the stage for a lot of division. Except it didn’t happen. Because love listens. The men of Reuben, Gad, and the half-tribe of Manasseh modeled this beautifully. They listened first. They heard all the inaccurate judgments against them, allowed their accusers to exhaust their diatribe, then they spoke. Humbly. Respectfully. Gently. They diffused the tension, created an opportunity to form a bond, build unity, create a stronger community. They listened first, explained second. Because Godly love listens first. Before assumptions. Before accusations. Before opinions. Before judgments. Godly love asks questions, obtains answers, gains understanding. It is patient, waiting its turn. It is kind, being careful with the hearts of others. It is never rude, demanding, or demeaning. It is the love of God. Spread through the people of God. To every Creation of God. All people. Everywhere. (I Corinthians 13:4-7; I Peter 3:8-9; Proverbs 15:1; Genesis 1:27; Colossians 1:16)
The hardest thing to do in this world of noise and opinions is listen. It is easy to get so caught up in the sharing of thoughts and assumptions that we just keep talking and drop our opinions in the mix as well. Judging others is so accepted and encouraged, even within the Christian community, that it has become one of the biggest sources of fracture. It is the tool of the evil one to cause division, create tension, inflict pain. And it isn’t godly. At all. It has no place there. Not in our hearts. Not in our homes. Not in God’s house. It is up to you to change it. Choose to show grace and mercy and love. Choose not to spread or share the things you have heard or know. Choose not to break confidences. Choose not to judge others on outward appearance, 15-second interactions, or the opinion of your best friend. Seek the truth. Ask questions. Hear truth. Heal hearts, mend wounds, build strength with love. Because real love listens. (James 1:19; Proverbs 10:19; 18:13; Romans 1:29-32; II Corinthians 5:16)
