Deu 27:18
Cursed
be he that maketh the blind to wander out of the way. And all the people shall say, Amen
I don't think that verse has anything to do with a man judging another man.
Here is the KJV commentary that should help:
15-26. There are twelve curses listed in this section, and the Levites were to read them aloud. The curses applied to every breach of the Law, referring to sins and transgressions already mentioned by Moses in Deuteronomy. The one thing they all had in common was that these sins could easily be concealed from judicial authorities. What the eyes of the community leaders could not see, God asked all Israel (vs.
26) to testify to publicly. Hence, they would be convicted of their secret transgressions of the Law
Matthew Henry's Commentary
The six tribes appointed for blessing, were all children of the free women, for to such the promise belongs,
Ga 4:31. Levi is here among the rest. Ministers should apply to themselves the blessing and curse they preach to others, and by faith set their own Amen to it. And they must not only allure people to their duty with the promises of a blessing, but awe them with the threatenings of a curse, by declaring that a curse would be upon those who do such things. To each of the curses the people were to say, Amen. It professed their faith, that these, and the like curses, were real declarations of the wrath of God against the ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, not one jot of which shall fall to the ground. It was acknowledging the equity of these curses. Those who do such things deserve to fall, and lie under the curse. Lest those who were guilty of other sins, not here mentioned, should think themselves safe from the curse, the last reaches all. Not only those who do the evil which the law forbids, but those also who omit the good which the law requires.
Without the atoning blood of Christ, sinners can neither have communion with a holy God, nor do any thing acceptable to him; his righteous law condemns every one who, at any time, or in any thing, transgresses it. Under its awful curse we remain as transgressors, until the redemption of Christ is applied to our hearts. Wherever the grace of God brings salvation, it teaches the believer to deny ungodliness and wordly lusts, to live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world, consenting to, and delighting in the words of God's law, after the inward man. In this holy walk, true peace and solid joy are to be found.
Nelson's Illustrated Commentary
27:18 The fourth curse required the humane treatment of disabled people.
blind: The underlying assumption is that only a person of great cruelty and no love for God would take advantage of a disabled person.