Be Careful Little Tongues What You Say

“Let your speech always be gracious…”
Colossians 4:6 (ESV)

Last week I posted a little note on my Facebook page about gossip and its destructive power.  Since that post, I’ve been conscientious about what I say: how much of what I say, or what I listen to, is actually gossip.  Like a sea with unfathomed depths and hidden streams is the pervasiveness of gossip in our lives.  None of us is immune to its reach – if you have an ear and a tongue, you are susceptible to gossip.

The British poet John Dryden put it this way:

There is a lust in man no charm can tame,
Of loudly publishing his neighbor’s shame.
Hence, on eagle’s wings immortal scandals fly,
While virtuous actions are but born and die.

The Word of God makes it even clearer:

“How great a forest is set ablaze by such a small fire!  And the tongue is a fire, a world of unrighteousness… For every kind of beast and bird, reptile and sea creature, can be tamed and has been tamed by mankind, but no human being can tame the tongue.  It is a restless evil, full of deadly poison” (James 3:5-8).

Gossip is the idle talk or spreading of rumors usually pertaining to the personal, intimate lives of others people.  Gossip, that is, what is being shared as gossip, may in fact be, and often is, true – what makes it gossip is who is sharing it and why it is being shared.  Gossip usually comes about because of anger and bitterness, the person being talked about has upset someone else, so the wounded party makes it their mission to destroy their reputation by sharing a tidbit of juicy information.  Sometimes gossip is used as a means to demonstrate one’s power, their ability to be “in the know,” to have just a little more information about someone than anyone else.  Regardless of the motive, gossip is always destructive and always sinful.

Yes, gossip is a sin.  Paul lists it in there with the “big sins” found in Romans 1.  Right alongside the famous sins like idolatry, homosexuality, murder and strife, you’ll find gossip and slander (and even disobedience to parents) (Rom 1:26-32).

It is very important to remember that gossip does not favor a particular gender.  When we think of gossip, we often picture a group of whispering women sitting around the table “having coffee.”  But if we’re honest, outside of the 10 minutes of reporting the scores and actual news of the sporting world, what would you call the other 50 minutes of Sports Center?  Or whatever major news network you prefer to watch?  The only difference between gossip and what we call news is the volume at which it is communicated.

And the church is not immune.  Paul implored the Corinthians to change their ways, saying,

“For I fear that perhaps when I come I may find you not as I wish, and that you may find me not as you wish—that perhaps there may be quarreling, jealousy, anger, hostility, slander, gossip, conceit, and disorder” (2 Corinthians 12:20).

I’ve heard it said before, “Christians don’t gossip, they just share prayer requests.”

Friends, let us be very careful about what we say, and to what we chose to listen.  We sing it as children, “O be careful little mouth what you say… O be careful little hears what you hear… For the Father up above is looking down in love…”  Paul encourages us in Colossians 4, “Let your speech always be gracious…”  So let me offer some encouragement along these lines.

  1. Consider your friends – are the people you associate with gossipers?  Do you find your conversations are always gravitating toward someone who is not a part of the conversation?  If you surround yourself with gossipers, then chances are, you will be sharing the gossip soon.  Proverbs 20:19 says, “Whoever goes about slandering reveals secrets; therefore do not associate with a simple babbler.”
  2. Examine your motives for sharing information – Why are you going to say what you are about to say?  Is your motive to get revenge for some harm, to show how much you know about another person, to wield some power or influence over what other people think about someone?  Unless what you are about to share is intended to help someone in need, encourage those who are struggling, and bringing glory to God, it is probably best to hold your tongue.  Again, Proverbs 11:13 says, “Whoever goes about slandering reveals secrets, but he who is trustworthy in spirit keeps a thing covered.”
  3. Think about the truthfulness of what you are going to say – Do you know that what you are saying is absolutely true?  If it is, does revealing that truth bring help to the situation?  Our speech should be edifying and uplifting one another.  Paul says in 1 Corinthians 14, “Let all things be done for building up.”
  4. Think about who you are sharing with – Does sharing this information deal directly with your situation?  So often gossip begins when person A hurts person B, so person B goes and tells person C.  This is called “Triangulation.”  You are incorporating people who have nothing to do with the problem, and cannot contribute to the solution.

After considering all of this, you may find you don’t have much to talk about.  Still, what would it look like if our conversations were transformed by the Holy Spirit; so that, rather than talking about the sins and shortcomings of those around us, we shared the goodness of God, the wonder of His love for us, and the blessing of knowing our risen Savior Jesus Christ.  Against such conversations there are no laws!

SDG

WYWIWYB

“we all… are being transformed
into the same image from one degree of glory to another”
(2 Cor 3:18 (ESV))

There is, in computer programming jargon, the following phrase “WYSIWYG,” pronounced “whiziwhig.”  It is an acronym for the term, “What You See is What You Get.”  I use a website program in WYSIWYG.  Rather than having to learn the website programing code HTML, I can simply place objects, pictures, text and links onto a page, and the program converts what I’ve done into the appropriate code, and it gets posted online exactly as I designed it (usually).  WYSIWYG is a great help, I figure knowing Biblical Greek and Hebrew and a few words in broken Spanish is all the language  training I need.

There is a Biblical truth that lies at the heart of the idea of WYSIWYG.  We might call it WYWIWIB – What You Worship is What You Become.  Think about this with me for a minute.

That which is most important to you, that which is at the center of your life, that which you worship (whether you call it worship or not), will shape and define who and what you become. 

If the most important thing in your life is finding financial security, wealth, and the accumulation of power, that will shape the decisions you make, the goals you set, and the way your treat others.  Your essential question in every situation will be along the lines of, “How does this benefit me; what can I can from this relationship?”

If you believe that the greatest truth in this life is found in the teachings of science, and particularly, evolutionary science, that will shape the decisions you make and how you treat those around you.  If we are all here by chance, and only the strongest survive and thrive, then compassion for the weak is only a luxury, self-preservation is the greatest good, and, since there is no afterlife (since there is no God who created life) all that matters in life is what you experience here and now.

But if we believe that we are created by a holy, sovereign, and gracious God, that too will shape who and what we become.  If we believe that there is a God at the center of the universe, a God who is the foundation of all life, then that God will also be the center of our lives, the foundation of our ethic and our experience.  Hughes Oliphant Old, dean of the Institute for Worship at Erskine College, once wrote “Those who worship the holy God become through that worship holy themselves.  When we worship, having our minds enlightened by the Spirit, our lives cleansed by the Spirit, our wills moved by the Spirit, and our hearts warmed by the Spirit, then our worship is transformed from being a mere human work into being a divine work.”  Worship is the workshop where we are transformed into the image of God.

I think this is at the heart of what Paul is saying in 2 Corinthians 3:18, “And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit.”

Who are you becoming?  Are you growing in the likeness of Christ, being transformed into his image, maturing in the work of the Spirit?  Or are you becoming more and more like the world around you, blending in with the tone and temper of the fallen world?  Answering this question will begin to show you who or what is at the heart of your worship.

May you become more like Him who has made you!

SDG