The Impulse to Judge
Romans 2 presses hard against the human instinct to sort the world into right and wrong people, exposing how quickly moral clarity turns into self-righteous judgment. Paul confronts both religious and nonreligious readers by revealing that judgment of others often masks our own guilt and misunderstands the patience of God, whose kindness is meant to lead us to repentance, not superiority. True judgment in Scripture is never contemptuous but discerning and restorative, grounded in humility rather than comparison. By stripping circumcision of its false power, Paul insists that belonging to God is not outward or earned but inward, a work of the Spirit in the heart. In Romans, the gospel levels every claim to moral high ground and leaves only one confession standing at the cross and the table: we are saved by grace alone.

