Shownotes
Section 1
Returning to 1 Corinthians 6, Dr. Dave tackles one of the most misunderstood subjects in modern Christianity: judgment and discernment. Paul directly states that believers will one day judge the world and even judge angels, making it impossible to honestly claim that Christians are never supposed to judge anything. The issue Jesus addressed in Matthew 7 was hypocritical judgment, not the complete abandonment of wisdom, evaluation, or discernment. Dr. Dave explains that believers constantly make judgments in everyday life through decisions, evaluations, and choices, but those judgments must be carried out with humility, mercy, honesty, and righteousness rather than arrogance or self-righteousness.
Section 2
As the passage unfolds, the emphasis shifts toward Paul’s frustration that believers were taking trivial disputes before secular courts instead of resolving matters within the fellowship of faith. These were not major criminal cases, but ordinary grievances and petty conflicts that should have been handled through wisdom, maturity, and godly counsel. Paul’s rebuke becomes especially sharp when he asks whether there is truly nobody wise enough among the believers to help settle such matters. Dr. Dave highlights how damaging it becomes when Christians publicly attack one another, creating division and dishonoring the witness of Jesus before unbelievers. The church is meant to reflect wisdom, unity, and grace rather than constant retaliation and conflict.
Section 3
Near the close, the teaching moves into the deeper heart issue behind these conflicts: the desire for revenge, vindication, and personal payback. Dr. Dave points to Jesus Himself, who suffered wrongfully yet entrusted judgment fully into the Father’s hands rather than retaliating. Believers are challenged to respond differently than the world by extending mercy, showing patience, and refusing to operate with a “tit for tat” mentality. Sharing a personal example involving stolen ministry money, Dr. Dave admits his own frustration before ultimately sensing the Lord tell him to let it go and move forward. The final encouragement is not weakness or passivity, but spiritual maturity—the willingness to trust God with justice while continuing to represent Jesus with grace, humility, and integrity.