Tuesday, January 2, 2018

When You Open Your Mouth


I suppose in creating a blog such as this that I have set myself up as some sort of teacher...dispensing Truth to the huddled masses, yearning to breathe free.

All the more reason for me to pay strict attention to these words from the third chapter of James, reprinted here from Eugene Peterson's The Message.




Don’t be in any rush to become a teacher, my friends. Teaching is highly responsible work. Teachers are held to the strictest standards. And none of us is perfectly qualified. We get it wrong nearly every time we open our mouths. If you could find someone whose speech was perfectly true, you’d have a perfect person, in perfect control of life.


A bit in the mouth of a horse controls the whole horse. A small rudder on a huge ship in the hands of a skilled captain sets a course in the face of the strongest winds. A word out of your mouth may seem of no account, but it can accomplish nearly anything—or destroy it!


It only takes a spark, remember, to set off a forest fire. A careless or wrongly placed word out of your mouth can do that. By our speech we can ruin the world, turn harmony to chaos, throw mud on a reputation, send the whole world up in smoke and go up in smoke with it, smoke right from the pit of hell.


This is scary: You can tame a tiger, but you can’t tame a tongue—it’s never been done. The tongue runs wild, a wanton killer. With our tongues we bless God our Father; with the same tongues we curse the very men and women he made in his image. Curses and blessings out of the same mouth!



My friends, this can’t go on. A spring doesn’t gush fresh water one day and brackish the next, does it? Apple trees don’t bear strawberries, do they? Raspberry bushes don’t bear apples, do they? You’re not going to dip into a polluted mud hole and get a cup of clear, cool water, are you?


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Truth is...the following prayer that I wrote in my journal on March 23, 2001 in response to this Scripture, is just as valid today as it was then:



Lord, may my mouth be consistently controlled by Your Spirit; not by my hunger for attention, affection, agreement, or applause.



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