This lesson is about making a distinction between things which are matters of faith as against things which are matters of judgment. It is important to make, and to understand, this distinction with regard to Bible authority and to deciding whether an action or an idea has divine authority or whether it is in the realm
A matter of faith is something about which God has made his will and wisdom clear. When we do or teach this thing, we know we have God's authority for it. We regard
A matter of judgment, on the other hand, is something about which God has made no clear statement, but about which we have given much thought and consideration, and arrived at a conclusion. We may follow this conclusion as individuals or as a group, and even commend the principle or practice to others, but we do not consider it binding upon others. Our judgments are guided by our faith, but we do not regard them as having
You probably learned in school that the area of a circle is found by the formula
The other numbers are π (pi, the ratio of circumference to diameter) and the exponent ². These are the same for any circle of any size. You cannot say, "When I work out the area of a circle, I prefer to use the whole number 4 rather than pi". Nor can I say, "When I work out the area of a circle, I like to use the exponent 3 instead of two." We cannot use numbers of our own choosing. We must use pi and the exponent two for any circle. These numbers are called constants.
[The above has nothing to do with Sunday pie. The mathematical pi is a constant, but Sunday pie is a variable. It can be chocolate, lemon, or frangipani, or anything
Faith is not a variable. It is a constant. It should be the same from person to person, and from gathering to gathering, because "faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God"
There are not as many different faiths as there are people or groups. There is "one faith"
Judgment is not a constant. It is a variable. It is not the same for every person or every gathering. Of course Christians may need, on certain matters, to be "of the same mind and of the same judgment"
There are many matters and instances in which we exercise our own judgment when applying God's word in our lives. We must be able to distinguish these judgments from the word of God itself. We should respect the considered judgments of others, just as they should respect ours. But the judgments of one person or group should not be bound upon others, for judgment is not faith, and does not have the
This has been a rather simple lesson
What this lesson does do, is to show the fault in
There used to be a slogan. One doesn't hear it much anymore. But it is still a good statement and sums up the thrust of this lesson: "In matters of faith,