Matthew 7:6

"You hypocrite! First remove the beam out of your own eye, and then you can see clearly to remove the speck out of your brother’s eye."

Key Reflection

This verse emphasizes that true judgment must begin with self-reflection. Only by first addressing our own significant flaws can we truly discern and help others with their minor imperfections, avoiding hypocrisy in the process.

From the Scholars: Barnes' Notes

Verse 6. Give not that which is holy, etc. By some, the word holy has been supposed to mean flesh offered in sacrifice, made holy, or separated to a sacred use. But it probably means here anything connected with religion--admonition, precept, or doctrine. Pearls are precious stones found in shell-fish, chiefly in India, in the waters that surround Ceylon. They are used to denote anything peculiarly precious, Re 17:4; 18:12-16; Mt 13:46. In this place they are used to denote the doctrines of the gospel. Dogs signify men who spurn, oppose, and abuse that doctrine; men of peculiar sourness and malignity of temper, who meet it like growling and quarrelsome curs, 2 Pe 2:22; Re 22:15.

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