THE LITTLEST MEMBER
James 3:5
Likewise, the tongue is a small part of the body, but it
makes great boasts. Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small
spark. (NIV)
My last devotion concerned
the power of the tongue and how we are sometimes entrapped by the words that we
speak. In reading today’s chapter of
Proverbs, I found that it has many verses concerning the tongue and the pain it
can inflict.
One of
the Bibles that I use is a Dake Annotated Reference Bible. Along with Scripture, each page is bookended
with notes on those Scriptures.
Today’s
Scripture that I keyed in on was Proverbs
17: 4-5, which reads:
"A wicked
person listens to deceitful lips; a liar pays attention to a destructive
tongue. Whoever mocks the poor shows
contempt for their Maker; whoever gloats over disaster will not go unpunished." (NIV)
The footnotes to these
Scriptures in my Bible gave this commentary:
4 great
sins: lying, deceit, mockery, gloating.
Notice that each one of these
sins involves the tongue! Let’s take a
look at them individually.
1.
Lying—the telling of lies, false statements,
untruthfulness, being deliberately
untruthful. The Bible says that lying is
a sin. It is displeasing to God. Think back to the Garden of Eden. Eve was told a lie. There’s even a Commandment about not lying
(“You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor”—Exodus 20:16). Remember Ananias and Sapphira? They paid for lying with their lives! It’s never right to lie.
2.
Deceit—concealment or distortion of the truth
for the purpose of misleading, fraud, cheating.
Deceit is much like lying, but it includes not only words, but actions
that are intended to make people believe things that are not true. We might think about these as “false promises”. Sometimes people make promises that they have
no intention of keeping or know that when they make them, they cannot keep
them. In Genesis 29, Laban deceived
Jacob by giving him Leah instead of Rachel, when Jacob had agreed to work seven
years for Rachel. Moses was deceived by
Pharoah in the book of Exodus by thinking that Israel would be set free after
the plagues were removed from Egypt. It
didn’t happen. The old adage “actions
speak louder than words” is certainly true in both of these instances! It’s never right to knowingly deceive.
3.
Mockery—to
ridicule or imitate in a ridiculous manner, to treat with contempt. In the book of Acts, the disciples were
mocked on Pentecost, with the people supposing that they were drunk on “new
wine”. Jesus was mocked by the soldiers
before He was crucified. In 2 Kings, two
people who mocked the prophet Elisha met with a bad end as a result of their
mocking. According to the verse in
Proverbs above, mocking someone shows contempt to God. After all, we are made in His image. Mockery is making fun, and in its true form,
it’s NOT funny. Mockery causes hurt and
anger. It’s never right to mock someone.
4.
Gloating—to
look at or to think about with great or excessive, often smug or malicious,
satisfaction; to voice such. In Genesis
9, Noah’s son Ham gloated over his father’s sin. You
could say that the Pharisees and Sadducees gloated when they thought that they
had silenced the voice of Jesus. We
might also think about gloating as taking pleasure in someone else’s pain. Perhaps someone has hurt us. We find out that something bad has happened
to them. Sometimes our immediate
reaction is “well, they deserved that”.
But, as Christians, it’s wrong for us to gloat over the misfortune of
anyone. Jesus told us in Matthew 6:44 to
love our enemies. It’s never right to
gloat about someone’s fall or failure.
We are to grieve, not gloat!
Yikes! How many times do we
find ourselves guilty of any of the above?
To be sure, none of us are “super saints”—we are all sinners saved by
grace. Any of us can stumble at any
time. But through God’s grace…and His
infinite mercy and love for us…there is forgiveness. And forgiveness isn’t just a one-time
deal. It’s there whenever we need it.
So, what’s the solution? Well,
let’s look to the Bible again:
Philippians 4:8
Finally,
brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right,
whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable--if anything is
excellent or praiseworthy--think about such things.
And not only should we think on such things, we must train our
tongue, that “littlest member” of our bodies, to speak of such things as well!
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