36 Bible Verses about Judging Others Actions
Most Relevant Verses
Do not judge, and you will not be judged; do not condemn, and you will not be condemned. Forgive, and you will be forgiven.
For, just as you judge others, you will yourselves be judged, and the measure that you mete will be meted out to you.
You who judge those that do such things and yet are yourself guilty of them-do you suppose that you of all men will escape God's judgment?
What have I to do with judging those outside the Church? Is it not for you to judge those who are within the Church,
The man who eats meat must not despise the man who abstains from it; nor must the man who abstains from eating meat pass judgment on the one who eats it, for God himself has received him.
Therefore you have nothing to say in your own defense, whoever you are who set yourself up as a judge. In judging others you condemn yourself, for you who set yourself up as a judge do the very same things.
There is only one Lawgiver and Judge--he who has the power both to save and to destroy. But who are you that pass judgment on your neighbor?
But the man with spiritual insight is able to understand everything, although he himself is understood by no one.
But it weighs very little with me that I am judged by you or by any human tribunal. No, I do not even judge myself;
As for yourself--keep this faith of yours to yourself, as in the presence of God. Happy is he who never has to condemn himself in regard to the very thing which he thinks right!
Who are you, that you should pass judgment on the servant of another? His standing or falling concerns his own master. And stand he will, for his Master can enable him to stand.
There are some men whose sins are conspicuous and lead on to judgment, while there are others whose sins dog their steps.
All who, when they sin, are without Law will also perish without Law; while all who, when they sin, are under Law, will be judged as being under Law.
And I saw the dead, high and low, standing before the throne; and books were opened. Then another book was opened, the Book of Life; and the dead were judged, according to their actions, by what was written in the books.
Do not you know that Christ's People will try the world? And if the world is to be tried by you, are you unfit to try the most trivial cases?
For at the Bar of the Christ we must all appear in our true characters, that each may reap the results of the life which he has lived in the body, in accordance with his actions--whether good or worthless.
Let us, then, cease to judge one another. Rather let this be your resolve--never to place a stumbling-block or an obstacle in a Brother's way.
For it is by your words that you will be acquitted, and by your words that you will be condemned."
He who rejects me, and disregards my teaching, has a judge already--the very Message which I have delivered will itself be his judge at the Last Day.
I do not want many of you, my Brothers, to become teachers, knowing, as you do, that we who teach shall be judged by a more severe standard than others.
Therefore do not pass judgment before the time, but wait till the Lord comes. He will throw light upon what is now dark and obscure, and will reveal the motives in men's minds; and then every one will receive due praise from God.
The Father himself does not judge any man, but has 'entrusted the work of judging entirely to his Son,'
I do not say 'your' scruples, but 'his.' For why should the freedom that I claim be condemned by the scruples of another?
For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him.
Let every one test his own work, and then his cause for satisfaction will be in himself and not in a comparison of himself with his neighbor;
I would ask the one man 'Why do you judge your Brother?' And I would ask the other 'Why do you despise your Brother?' For we shall all stand before the Bar of God.
Because he has fixed a day on which he intends to 'judge the world with justice,' by a man whom he has appointed--and of this he has given all men a pledge by raising this man from the dead."
But take care that this right of yours does not become in any way a stumbling-block to the weak.
Some one, indeed, may say--"You are a man of faith, and I am a man of action." "Then show me your faith," I reply, "apart from any actions, and I will show you my faith by my actions."