2019-06-16 James 3:5b-8 TAMING THE TONGUE (3): ITS PROPENSITY TO DESTROY
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Transcript
TAMING THE TONGUE (3): ITS PROPENSITY TO DESTROY
(James 3:5b-8)
June 16, 2019
Read James 3:5b-8 – Prov 12:18) There is one whose rash words are like
sword thrusts, but the tongue of the wise brings healing.” So, what does our
speech produce -- healing or hurt? Help or harm? Health or havoc? Our words
have far-reaching implications – far reaching. And the natural propensity of
the tongue is to destroy. That’s its default position. 8b) “It is a restless evil,
full of deadly poison.” That’s cause to examine every word. Our mouth is
filled with TNT! Prov 18: 21) Death and life are in the power of the tongue,
and those who love it will eat its fruits.” If you love to talk, be careful!
5b) “How great a forest is set ablaze by such a small fire!” On October 8,
1871 at 8:30 pm, a lantern in Mrs. O’Leary’s barn was kicked over by a cow.
A small blaze ensued. But that barn was located in the middle of Chicago, and
the little spark spread until it was a conflagration that lasted 3 days. By the
time it was over, 17,500 building were destroyed, 300 people had died, and
125,00 others were left homeless. That’s the power we have in our mouths.
I.
The Spark
As kids, one of my brothers lit a match and tossed it. It blew into some dry
grass and it soon spread to an old dry shed, nearly burning it to the ground.
One little spark. That spark can be our tongue. 6 And the tongue is a fire, a
world of unrighteousness.” That little tongue – innocuous – is actually a world
of unrighteousness. Its natural propensity is to do serious damage.
“A world of unrighteousness.” Righteousness is what God is like, right?
Unrighteousness is the opposite. Righteousness is the presence of God,
unrighteousness is the absence of God. That’s the uncontrolled tongue. The
tongue expresses the heart – which naturally is Jer 17:9: “deceitful above all
things, and desperately sick.” Seeking selfish autonomy. Like Satan tempting
Eve, Gen 3:5b: “And you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” Be your
own god. That is the natural state of the heart, still existing in believers –
always at war with the HS. So, the tongue, is the outward expression of a
wayward heart – a world of unrighteousness. It is the expression of a heart
being its own god. Playing God is the spark that destroys.
How does the tongue play God? Let us count the ways, right? It is a whole
world of ungodliness. It tells lies – redefining real truth to its own advantage –
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playing God. It slanders people – makes itself look good at someone else’s
expense – playing God. It expresses anger – playing God in judging others. It
creates discord – insisting on its own rights at the expense of others – playing
God. It berates, discourages, makes fun, humiliates, gossips, misleads, and
undermines – playing God. Listen – Beloved, your tongue and mine, left to its
own devices is like a world in love with self and hostile to God.
It is a world of unrighteousness expressed when words of scorn, pride,
impatience, anger, hatred, bitterness, divisiveness, greed, and untruths are let
loose like little sparks that light little fires here, there and everywhere
reflecting our “me first” orientation. The tongue is a world of hurt.
It’s a dangerous world -- wide-ranging. It can do damage from a distance. A
chance word dropped at one end of the country can bring extensive grief and
hurt at the other – even on another continent. The tongue is a world with its
own arsenal of ICBMs that can deliver destruction from afar. And social
media has intensified that capability exponentially.
And you can’t get it back. Once it’s out, it’s out. If you see a wild dog
prowling, you can call the dogcatcher to round it up. You can rein it in. But
there are no word catchers. There is no, “Whoa, there goes a mean word.
Some guy just unleashed it on his wife. Let’s get it off the street before it
does real damage.” You can’t. It’s a world of unrighteousness.
Some years ago Morgan Blake wrote in the Atlanta Journal: “I am more
deadly than the screaming shell from the howitzer. I win without killing. I tear
down homes, break hearts, and wreck lives. I travel on the wings of the wind. No
innocence is strong enough to intimidate me, no purity pure enough to daunt me. I
have no regard for truth, no respect for justice, no mercy for the defenseless. My
victims are as numerous as the sands of the sea, and often as innocent. I never
forget and seldom forgive. My name is Gossip.” The spark that sets a life on fire.
It happened to Rachel Jackson – wife of Andrew Jackson. He ran for president
in 1828. The Whigs resurrected an old story. Rachel had been married to an
abusive husband and was divorced in 1892 – so she thought. She and Andrew
married only to find that due to a technicality the marriage was not valid. They
were immediately re-married on January 17, 1794. But the Whigs spun it,
alleging Rachel was a “convicted adulteress.” The shame was too much for
Rachel, a devout believer. Andrew won the election, but Rachel died of a
broken heart on December 22, 1828, just before they were leaving for DC.
Two words. “Convicted adulteress.” That was the spark that destroyed a life.
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Words can destroy. Whether it’s innuendo, verbal attacks, lies, whatever, they
destroy relationships, opportunity, reputations, lives and even eternity. The
tongue – my tongue – your tongue, is the spark that can unleash untold misery.
II.
The Spread
So, the tongue is a spark that starts a fire that leads to “staining the whole
body” (6c). The fire spreads to the rest of the person. Anything the tongue
speaks that’s not under the control of the HS potentially contaminates the
whole person. Like the 2 women who met in the street. The first says, “Tillie
told me that you told her that secret I told you not to tell her.” The other
replies, “She’s a mean thing. I told Tillie not to tell you I told her.” The first
responds, “Well, I told Tillie I wouldn’t tell you she told me—so don’t tell
her I did.” With an uncontrolled tongue, integrity goes right out the window.
Our thoughtless words almost always rebound against us. Bryan Chappel says,
“The faultfinder injures himself more than the accused. The mud slinger
cannot engage in his favorites pastime without getting some of the mud on
his own heart.” Our temper-tantrums, lies, gossip, criticisms, boasting, and
outbursts to set someone else straight say way more about us than the other
person. They cling to us like Velcro doing far more damage to us than anyone
else. It’s like hitting a golf ball against a brick wall only to have it rebound
against us at twice the speed. It’s deadly. Gal 5:15: “But if you bite and
devour one another, watch out that you are not consumed by one another.”
John MacArthur got a sport coat at a fire sale for $9. It smelled a little, but he
thought a little fresh air would clean it up. He got used to it, but says,
“Because of a limited wardrobe, I wore the coat often, but apparently it
never lost its distinct odor as many people commented on it. They probably
thought I was a heavy smoker.” That’s just how the damage of an
uncontrolled tongue clings to us. Thoughtless words define us. Prov 29:20
“Do you see a man who is hasty in his words? There is more hope for a fool
than for him.” The biggest loser when I speak ill-advised words – me!
The fire sparked by the tongue spreads to the whole body. It destroys
character. You know that cantankerous 80-year-old? You know how they got
that way? By an uncontrolled tongue. The tongue leads where you’re headed.
It defines your future. The venom and poison of what you say now is who
you’ll be when age imposes its limitations. (5c): “The tongue is set among our
members, staining the whole body.”
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III.
The Slaughter
But there’s more! 6c: “setting on fire the entire course of life, and set on fire
by hell.” That’s heavy! That small spark of innuendo, criticism or anger – that
spark can consume everything around us, creating a fire sent from hell itself.
Wow! The spark has moved from tongue to body to everything and everyone
I touch. By unkind words, I’ve given everyone around me a taste of hell.
Jas’ language here is graphic. “Course of life” is literally “circle of being or
existence.” Pix your life as a wheel, tongue at the hub. When undisciplined, it
lights a fire that extends thru the spokes, setting off a fireworks display in all
directions, consuming everything it contacts. It’s not only stained your life;
it’s impacting everything around you. Your whole existence could go up in
flames. Every word brings healing or havoc.
Words kill – sometimes literally. Who would have thought that a book written
by a disgraced prisoner could have much power? But eventually 125 lives
were lost for every word of Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf. Words have power.
But we know that was a racist, evil book from the start. That’s not us, we
think. But we must realize our own seemingly innocuous but thoughtless
words that define our existence – words that mean nothing to us, but
discouraging words, angry words, bitter words have the power to harm us and
others along with us. That’s what we must see.
Words are like the female spider described by Walter Wangerin in Ragman
and Other Cries of Faith. She’s a widow. Why? Bc she consumes all who
come her way, mates and visitors alike. Her dining room is a morgue, filled
with specimens who are perfect on the outside, hollow on the inside. She has
no stomach to digest with. So she uses tiny punctures to ingest her digestive
juices into her victim, turning his insides into a warm soup which she then
consumes, leaving the outside intact. Wangerin likens it to the way we
consume “the souls of one another after having cooked them in various
enzymes: guilt, humiliations, cruel love – there are a number of fine, acidic
mixes. And some among us are so skilled with the hypodermic word that our
dear ones continue to sit up and to smile, quite as tho they were still alive.”
Thus the fire of the tongue -- from spark, to spread, to slaughter.
It all sneaks up on us. World magazine, columnist Andree Seu Peterson, tells
that she used cutting words, or even silence, to foster attentiveness in her
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husband in the early days of the marriage. She comments: “Not only did it not
[work], but I found that choice hardened into habit, and habit into
character, and that I could scarcely quit even when I wanted to.” That’s bad
enough. But she goes on, “Hell came calling decades later, the day I thought
we were having a pleasant family meal in a restaurant and my son said,
‘You and Dad fought the whole time I was growing up.’ I hadn’t thought he
had noticed that. But it tarnished his entire childhood. I thought I could pull
off punishing my husband while raising my children in the Christian faith.”
Hell came calling -- words “set on fire by hell.” To some extent this is all of
us. So, we must be filled with the Spirit to minimize damage – bring healing.
IV.
The Savagery
The worst part about an uncontrolled tongue – you can’t undo the damage.
It’s like a savage, untamed animal. 7 For every kind of beast and bird, of
reptile and sea creature, can be tamed and has been tamed by mankind, 8 but
no human being can tame the tongue. It is a restless evil, full of deadly
poison.” Men can put their heads inside trained lions mouth without harm.
Elephants bow on command. Tigers leap thru fire. But the tongue – no man
can tame it. Once words are out, you can’t get them back. They assume a life
of their own. Those sound waves once made go on forever. They may get out
of hearing range, they never get out of memory range. There’s an old
proverb that says, “You are master of the unspoken word, but the spoken
word is master of you.” Once it’s out, it is no longer under your control.
There’s an old story about Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin at the Yalta
Conference at the end of WWII. They drank heavily one night and Churchill
found himself wondering next morning exactly what he had said. He
immediately wrote a memo to Stalin of what he hoped and intended to say.
Stalin wrote back, “Don’t worry about what you might have said last night.
Remember, I was drinking also.” Then he added a P.S. “BTW, the translator
has been shot.” Too bad you can’t shoot thoughtless words! That’s the
savagery of the tongue. You can’t get it back. So David prayed in Psa 141:34: “Set a guard, O LORD, over my mouth; keep watch over the door of my
lips! 4) Do not let my heart incline to any evil.” I don’t need me in control of
my mouth. I need Him. On my own my tongue takes on a savage existence.
Conc – So, how bad is your fire? Let me illustrate how words can kill. In 1899
4 reporters from Denver met by chance at a rr station, each hoping a celebrity
would turn up providing a scoop for their Sunday papers. None did. While
discussing their dilemma in a nearby saloon, Al Stevens suggested they make
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up a story. They laughed at first, but soon agreed on a whopper so incredible
that no one would question it. They placed their story in China where it would
be hard to check. The story concerned some American engineers on their way
to China to bid on a job to demolish the Great Wall. Next day, all four papers
carried a headline about the great China wall being doomed.
But the spark grew. Their story was taken seriously and ran in newspapers on
the East Coast and even abroad. When citizens in China heard that Americans
were sending a demolition crew to dismantle the Great Wall, they were
indignant. Members of a secret society of Chinese patriots, who were already
inclined against any foreign intervention, took action. They attacked the
foreign embassies in Peking, and took up the fight against government
intervention. The journalistic hoax was the spark that fueled the Boxer
rebellion, that cost thousands of lives including more than 200 missionaries.
So how is the fire in your mouth – healing or harmful? Prov 12:18) There is
one whose rash words are like sword thrusts, but the tongue of the wise brings
healing.” It’ll take work, but let’s be healers – together – for the glory of our
King. Let’s pray.
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