Until recently, we were pretty much in the dark about the human
body. But then came the X-ray with its peeping eye...a marvelous
instrument which has saved us much human misery.
It was able to show us the human heart, but it couldn't show us the soul or
it could show us the throat, but not the voice.
The brain, but not the mind.
Nevertheless, medical science has done much to help this
outward man that perishes.
If our eyes are getting dim, we can get glasses.
If our kidneys or heart fail, we can have a transplant.
But as far as I know, there is one member of the body that has
never been transplanted. If we used our arms and legs as much as
we use this part, we'd be incredibly stiff and sore. But this
member never gets tired, and I've never seen one with a splint on
it. As you get older you may get dentures - but you will always
have the same tongue you were born with! There are artificial
joints made these days, but no artificial tongues.
My mother was pretty smart when it came to the tongue. She
sprinkled her daily conversation with wise sayings like
"Keep your tongue between your teeth" and
"Think twice before you speak once."
The Scottish people have some proverbs, too: "Keep your tongue a prisoner and your
body will go free" and
"A long tongue shortens friendships."
My mother would also tell us, "Remember, one day you'll answer to
God for every word you say."
The Bible mentions many kinds of tongues:
a flattering tongue (Psalm 5:9)
a proud tongue (Psalm 12:3; 73:9)
a lying tongue (Psalm 109:2; Prov. 6:17)
a deceitful tongue (Psalm 120:2)
a perverted tongue (Prov. 10:31; 17:20)
a soothing tongue (Prov. 15:4)
a healing tongue (Prov. 12:18)
a destructive tongue (Prov. 17:4)
a mischievous and wicked tongue (Psalm 10:7)
a soft tongue (Prov. 25:15)
a backbiting tongue (Prov. 25:23)
James also talks about the tongue. He says it's a small part of
the body, and yet it boasts of great things. He calls the tongue
a fire, the very world of iniquity. James says it is untamable, a
restless evil full of deadly poison, used both to bless God and
to curse men. But James also told us that a man who doesn't
stumble in what he says is a perfect man. (James 3:2-10)
I wonder how startled James would be today to find out how
much man has "conquered." We've put men into big, fancy tin
cans, and shot them off into space. We've sent men into
submarines without coming up to the surface for months. Man
has had the moon under his feet and he's left his footprints on
the ocean floor as well. We've also put some fantastic canisters up into the sky,
bouncing our voices off these satellites to countries around the
world. Look at how we've harnessed the wind with giant windmills,
and made the rivers and waterfalls drive our turbines. What
incredible power man has over his world! And yet, he has still
not conquered his own tongue.
A Damaging Sword
In Psalm 64:3 the tongue is called "a sword." This sword has
certainly damaged,
bruised,
wounded,
and killed more people
than all the swords in all the wars since history began.
You've seen it many times. That newly married couple - so
lovey-dovey for days and days on end. But one day the fellow lost
his temper and slashed into the heart and affections of his wife
with uncontrollable anger and with words he might regret forever.
But it was said. The damage was done. How often we need to
remember that old saying: We cannot call back the arrow we've
shot into the air, the water under the bridge, or the spoken
word. One of the earliest poems I ever learned was:
Angry words, O let them never
From the tongue, unbridled slip.
With the soul's best impulse
Ever check them,
Ere they soil the lips.
Angry words are quickly spoken,
Bitter thoughts are rashly stirred.
Fondest links of life are broken.
By a single angry word.
Is there something that could be numbered greater than the
incomprehensible amount of stars in the heavens? What about the
sands by the sea, every blade of grass, or we could add all of
these things together. There would still be something that would
exceed them in number! It's the things said by this little
monster called the tongue. This uncontrollable little red rebel
that lives in a red cave guarded by two rows of white soldiers
called teeth. Think about how many words are being spoken today just over all
the telephones worldwide. And how about all the words slung
around the globe by our TVs and radios? The tongue has done more
damage than any other instrument in the human body.
We are responsible for the words that we speak. "And I say to you, that every careless word that men
shall speak, they shall render account for it in the
day of judgment. For by your words you shall be
justified, and by your words you shall be condemned."
(Matt. 12:36-37) Our own words snare us. (Prov. 6:2) We are ensnared by vows and
promises spoken, but not kept. By reckless criticisms and rash
judgments.
"How can you, being evil, speak what is good? For
the mouth speaks out of that which fills the heart.
The good man out of his good treasure brings forth
what is good; and the evil man out of his evil
treasure brings forth what is evil."
(Matt. 12:34-35)
The human heart can be a snakepit,
a dungeon of devilry,
a foxhole of filth,
a pit of perversity.
Actually, it's the manufacturing place of all uncleanness and all
sin. The showcase of the heart is the tongue. My simple words
cannot exaggerate the corruption of the heart. And the filth that
comes out of a filthy heart comes through the lips. But when I've
said all I can about it, the strongest thing is surely said in
Proverbs 18:21 -
"Death and life are in the power of the tongue...."
A Rolling Story
A rolling stone gathers no moss, but a rolling story gathers
something fresh every time we say it. Every time we repeat it,
something is added and something is taken away until it's
nothing like the truth. Some little bit of gossip starts with a
whisper, then it swells and becomes a tumult, and somebody's
left heartbroken.
Do you wonder that Proverbs 10:19 says, "When there are many
words, transgression is unavoidable, but he who restrains his
lips is wise"? Or Ecclesiastes 10:14, "The fool multiplies
words..."?
How often we sing (full of self-pity) "Oh what needless pain
we bear...." Someone should write a verse about what needless
pain we cause when we lacerate people, wound them, and bruise
them with our tongues.
I want to sound a word of caution about the flippancy of our
language, and the carelessness and exaggeration in the language
used by preachers. What awful things come from their lips these
days that cannot be justified by Scripture!
Just this week I spoke with a big, strong professional football
player who has now become a full-time evangelist...a very godly
man. He broke into tears as he told me about the slander and
deceit used against him among Christians. He said through his
tears, "Mr. Ravenhill, I've suffered character assassination."
I said, "Friend, you're under a delusion that most Christians
are under. There's nobody that can assassinate your character.
Character is what God knows you are.
Reputation is what men think you are.
They might have lied, wrecked your reputation, and made it almost
impossible for you to get into other pulpits, but remember this"
(as you read this, you remember it too): "The only one who can
wreck your character is you. God doesn't listen to gossip
except to judge it. The only one who can lower or higher you in
the estimation of God is you by your obedience or by your
disobedience."
Products of the Tongue
Have the Christians of today improved over the Christians in
Corinth? They didn't have a Bible to read but Paul wrote boldly
to them,
"For I am afraid that perhaps when I come I may find
you to be not what I wish and may be found by you to
be not what you wish; that perhaps there may be
strife,
jealousy,
angry tempers,
disputes,
slanders,
gossip,
arrogance,
disturbances."
These are all products of the tongue.
Hey, friend, before we go any further, make out your checklist.
Have you been in unprofitable, ridiculous debates, arguing just
to win someone over? So very often we win the debate and lose
the friend. Paul said that among these professing Christians
there was strife, jealousy, angry tempers, disputes, slander,
gossip, arrogance, and disturbances.
After Jesus Himself, I believe that Paul was the greatest
preacher who ever lived. But when writing to the Corinthians, he
said,
"And when I came to you, brethren, I did not come
with superiority of speech or of wisdom,
proclaiming to you the testimony of God. For I
determined to know nothing among you except Jesus
Christ, and Him crucified. And I was with you in
weakness and in fear and in much trembling."
(I Cor 2:1-3)
That doesn't sound like the Apostle we think of, clothed with all
the armor of God, pulling down strongholds and putting the devil
to flight.
But then he goes on in verse 4, "And my message and my
preaching were not in persuasive words of wisdom..." I doubt he
was a fascinating preacher, juggling with words that sparkled.
His job was to glorify Jesus. If we preach and people remember
us, we've missed it. He says that his preaching was not with
persuasive words of wisdom, "but in demonstration of the Spirit
and of power."
He didn't spend hours like some preachers, selecting the most
fascinating and flashy words. Maybe we might say "fleshy" words.
His concern was to project Jesus Christ only and Him crucified.
There was nothing flippant or fleshly about what he said, and
certainly nothing foolish.
Paul warns us, "In reference to your former manner of life, lay
aside the old self...be renewed in the spirit of
your mind, and put on the new self, which in the
likeness of God has been created in righteousness
and holiness of the truth...Let no unwholesome
word proceed from your mouth, but only such a word
as is good for edification according to the need
of the moment, that it may give grace to those who
hear. Let all bitterness
and wrath
and anger
and clamor
and slander
be put away from you, along with all malice."
(Eph. 4:22-31)
Paul also exhorts us, "There must be no filthiness and silly
talk, or coarse jesting, which are not fitting..." (Eph. 5:4)
I've heard preachers eating dinner together get into borderline
jokes, and then someone pushes it further until it's totally
disgusting. I like humor, but I don't like stupidity, filthiness,
or coarse jesting. Oh how many silly, stupid things are said.
Dr. Tozer used to say to me,
"Len, be careful.
Remember, never, never, speak lightly of the devil.
Don't tell any jokes about hell."
The devil is not almighty, but we must not forget that he is
mighty. All too often Christians speak too lightly of the
kingdom of darkness, as if to treat the whole thing as
unimportant. (Jude 9)
Muzzle Your Mouth
David says,
"I will guard my ways, that I may not sin with my
tongue; I will guard my mouth as with a muzzle."
(Psalm 39:1)
We usually think of other parts of our body as being agencies of
sin, but not our tongue. David says "I will guard my mouth."
Colossians 4:6 says,
"Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned,
as it were, with salt."
Not pepper! Sometimes anger gets in our speech and spoils
everything that we've said. Psalm 12:3 says,
"May the Lord cut off all flattering lips, the tongue
that speaks great things."
These surely are stern warnings to believers.
Psalm 15 asks,
"Lord, who may abide in Thy tent? Who may dwell on
Thy holy hill? He who walks with integrity, and
works righteousness, and speaks truth in his heart."
So there you have it: walking and talking. Walking uprightly,
speaking the truth in your heart. And in verse 3,
"He does not slander with his tongue, nor does evil
to his neighbor, nor takes up a reproach against his
friend."
I believe we sabotage a lot of our prayers because we're doing
what James says - one minute we're blessing God, and then
afterwards we're cursing men. Not blaspheming or using vile
language, but criticizing them. One minute our tongues are
speaking about holy things, and the next, unholy things. You see,
the tongue is an index of the heart.
Do you wonder that I shudder when I look at a large
congregation singing, "Oh, for a thousand tongues to sing my
great Redeemer's praise..."?
Goodness me, if they did have 1,000 tongues, there would be 999
times more gossip and criticism and slander than there is now!
Earth would be hell and the Church would be as bad. Oh, no! If we
can't control the one we have, how could we manage 999 more?
How often do we sing our great Redeemer's praise? For five
minutes in two Sunday morning hymns? And the rest of the week
it's careless and silly talk. Talk of anything but the deep
things of God.
Showcase Of The Heart
Our words reflect what's in our hearts. If a man loves sports,
he talks sports. If he loves money, he talks money. If he loves
art, he talks art.
I marvel at the slackness of speech among Christians and at how
often preachers are guilty of gross exaggerations in their
reports about their meetings, and at how carelessly they slander
others.
I was at a ministers' conference some years ago and we drove
back and forth in packed buses all week between the hotel and the
conference center. But never once among all those ministers was
the conversation about God or holiness or the coming of Jesus. It
was sports, or golf handicaps, or how big their Sunday School
was. It was just senseless chatter even among preachers. But
preachers aren't the only ones guilty of conversation which is
unprofitable and unedifying.
Do you wonder that the psalmist in Psalm 51 cries "Create in me
a clean heart"? We've already considered the foulness of the
human heart, yet God can take that heart and make it pure and
beautiful and eloquent for Himself. There's nothing that gives us
away as much as our speech. Our speech shows where our hearts
are.
You can't cover up your heart.
If there's bitterness in our hearts, it will come out
through what we say and how we say it.
If there's hatred, hatred will come.
If there's anger, anger will come.
No wonder James says that the tongue can't be controlled. The
heart is engineering all that the tongue is going to say.
The heart is the factory that produces all these vile things,
and the tongue is the showcase of the heart. Surely one of the
most amazing things about the transforming grace of God is that
man loses his filthy language, lying tongue, and unholy anger
when he gets saved.
There's little use carrying a big Bible and wearing a lapel pin
saying how spiritual we are
if we explode at the office,
speak unkindly to our children,
or if we're critical and bitter
and become known as somebody who carries on.
Stick Out Your Tongue
In the springtime my mother used to say, "Put out your tongue
and let me see what it's like." She'd say, "Oh, no! You're not in
good condition," and then she had some horrible concoction that
we had to take.
I wonder, if we had to put out our tongues at the end of each
day if they would be unclean with gossip, slander, criticism, or
bitterness? Or do we have them under control, as Paul says,
"sound in speech which is beyond reproach"? (Titus 2:8) Is our
speech always with grace, seasoned with salt?
I helped at a funeral once where there were several teenage
children. They sobbed and groaned and carried on as I'd never
seen anyone do at a funeral. I said to my senior pastor, "Oh,
how much they loved their mother!"
He said, "No, they're just crying in remorse. They were the
most disobedient, backbiting, sarcastic children ever. They
always abused their mother with their words. They gave her an
awful time. They just cut her to pieces with their tongues." Many
of us suddenly feel this same unbearable guilt when someone dies
and we can't take back the words we've spoken or heal the wounds
we've made.
This is a day when people are screaming about ecology. We want
pure rivers and pure air. What about pure hearts? It's a pity
we don't raise our voice in the Church and call everyone to
recite Psalm 51 and cry with David, "Create in me a clean heart!"
Or, as Wesley put it,
O for a heart to praise my God.
A heart from sin set free.
A heart that always feels the blood,
So freely shed for me.
A heart resigned, submissive, meek,
My Great Redeemer's throne,
Where only Christ is heard to speak,
Where Jesus reigns alone.
If Christ were speaking internally all the time, we wouldn't
come out with the rubbish that we utter so much.
When you get to my age, you look back and it's an awesome
thing. I think about the millions of words I must have said in 60
years of preaching. Speaking at least 120 words a minute, I can
speak 1,200 words in ten minutes. In 60 minutes I've spoken 7,200
words and I've done this twice a day sometimes and done it for
years. Then there's all the words I've written.
What a day when all the great orators stand before the Lord.
Oh, that we might find men today whose hearts are burning with
love and devotion, and because their hearts are burning, their
speech will burn -
with love,
with adoration,
and with hatred for sin.
My prayer is,
"Lord, teach me to hold my tongue. Teach me to do
as the psalmist says, set a watch at the door of my
lips that my speech may always be seasoned with
grace. My tongue never a sword. My speech always
edifying, uplifting, and that which glorifies God."
Amen.
For further study
Psalm 12:3-4
Psalm 34:13
Psalm 37:30
Psalm 39:1,3
Psalm 120:2-3
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Proverbs 20:15
Eccl. 5:6
Romans 3:4,13-14
II Cor. 12:20
James 3:2
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All Scripture quotations are from the New American Standard
Bible,(C)1977 The Lockman Foundation.