Tongue Trainers

All kinds of animals, birds, reptiles and sea creatures are being tamed and have been tamed by mankind, but no human being can tame the tongue. It is a restless evil, full of deadly poison.

With the tongue we praise our Lord and Father, and with it we curse human beings, who have been made in God’s likeness. Out of the same mouth come praise and cursing. My brothers and sisters, this should not be. Can both fresh water and salt water flow from the same spring? My brothers and sisters, can a fig tree bear olives, or a grapevine bear figs? Neither can a salt spring produce fresh water.

James 3:7-12

James’ discussion of the tongue continues in these verses with a bit of hyperbole. While there are people who tame all sorts of animals, who can tame their tongue? Well, it isn’t easy is it?

The hyperbole, as I see it, is in suggesting that the tongue cannot be tamed at all. Taming the tongue is very difficult for most of us, but if it were impossible, what would be the point of this passage? From time-to-time folks come along who insist on a literal interpretation of everything and they sometimes object to my assertion that the Bible contains hyperbole. In the unlikely event that you are one of those, let me just politely ask you if you would take this passage to justify tossing “F-bomb”s all over town, after all, the tongue cannot be tamed; “F-bombs” are normal, right?

James points out that the same mouth can both praise God and curse those made in His image, and the very strong implication is that this is not an acceptable way for followers of Jesus to behave. Certainly, it is almost impossible for me to imagine Jesus doing this, and since He is our model, I think we can safely conclude that this is also not the way we should conduct ourselves.

At the risk of shocking some, I would also say that there is much more at stake here than some kind of a “violation” because we might have uttered a “forbidden” word. No, that is entirely an Old Covenant perspective of Law and violations. In Christ, things are different. Cursing our brother is not simply a “violation” of some code, it is tearing down one of God’s sacred children. It isn’t simply about one’s choice of phrasing, it’s showing disdain for someone who God loves so much that He was willing for His Son to die to save that person, and thus it is a direct affront to God Himself. It is surely not an example of love in action.

This is a pretty obvious point, and I realize that James (and I) have covered this same principle in the discussion about favoritism, so I will leave it at that. Instead, I will close by recounting something one of my instructors taught years ago that made an impression on me that has stuck with me over time. She said that the way you speak is the way you think; if your language is sloppy and undisciplined, so will your thoughts be sloppy and undisciplined. If that is the case, your reasoning will be virtually non-existent.

Something to reflect upon, perhaps?

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About Don Merritt

A long time teacher and writer, Don hopes to share his varied life's experiences in a different way with a Christian perspective.
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15 Responses to Tongue Trainers

  1. scythewieldor's avatar scythewieldor says:

    Luk 6:45 A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is evil: for of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaketh.
    A few days ago, you reminded us that every good gift & every perfect gift comes down from the father of lights. I remembered how, by keeping our minds on things above (Col 3:2), our attention is trained on things that are thankworthy. Our hearts learn to treasure good things. Out of that treasure, good words will come.

  2. desirayl's avatar Desiray says:

    The tongue is the smallest and yet we don’t want to control it. If we would give our mouth a break and stop speaking death we would be much better.

  3. Rebeca Jones's avatar Rebeca Jones says:

    I love this, Don. Too often we get caught up in a violation of ‘the law’ without ever understanding that it is more important to address the underlying sin infecting our hearts. I agree that what is in our minds comes out in our speech. Nice post, worthy of reflection for sure!

  4. paulfg's avatar paulfg says:

    I love the “sacred” word. Noticed that a few times recently here (I stopped typing it as much recently – kept typing scared instead – was sacred I wouldn’t notice the typo).

    And this James chappie – good stuff!

    One point (from a brain that has butterfly reasoning most of the time) – analysis and anal are very similar spellings. Just a thought from my butterfly brain. 🙂

    • Don Merritt's avatar Don Merritt says:

      And here I thought I was the only one who just can’t type certain words right, always make the same errors and all that stuff… one thing is certain: I’ll never notice if spell check says it’s OK! 🙂

  5. vw1212's avatar vwoods1212 says:

    Very profound post. vw

  6. Elaine's avatar Elaine says:

    Very good post. You give a lot of food for thought. I really enjoy your writing Don.

  7. gwennonr's avatar gwennonr says:

    Painful. But good. Thank you.

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