<< Back |
Chosen no: R-4705 a, from: 1910 Year. |
Change lang
| |
Blessing God And Cursing Men
"But the tongue can no man tame: it is an unruly evil, full of
deadly poison. Therewith bless we God, even the Father,
and therewith curse we men, which are made after the
similitude of God. Out of the same mouth proceedeth
blessing and cursing. My brethren, these
things ought not so to be."--James 3:8-10.
THESE words of the inspired Apostle
are addressed to the "brethren"--not to the world. Indeed, the entire
Epistle is addressed to the Church. The fact that in opening it James addresses
"the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad," is not to the
contrary of this. We are to remember that to the twelve tribes of Israel, the
natural Seed of Abraham, pertained originally the great Covenant or promise of
God made to Abraham. By natural heredity, then, God's offer or proposition to
bless the world belonged to fleshly Israel, as the Divine instruments,
if they would comply with the Divine conditions. But one of the Divine
conditions was that they should have the faith of Abraham, and should not be
considered the promised Seed of Abraham without that faith, since Abraham was
to be the Father of the Faithful.
Our Lord and the Apostles, in the
New Testament, set forth clearly how and why natural Israel, as a nation, was broken off
from inheritance under that Covenant. The Apostle, representing the promise as
an olive root, describes all Israelites as branches growing up out of that
root, and tells us that many of the natural branches were broken off, the vast
majority, and that only a remnant at the first advent were found possessed of
the faith of Abraham, and accepted by our Lord as members of the house of
sons.--John 1:12.
The Apostle further explains that
the rejection of the unbelieving of natural Israel left the way open to engraft
in the place of the broken-off branches some from amongst the Gentiles,
possessed of the faith of Abraham. And this, we see, has been the work of this
Gospel Age-- grafting into the original root of promise believers from amongst
the Gentiles, who were once without God and had no hope in the world, strangers
from the commonwealth of Israel, but are now brought nigh, united with Christ,
and through him united with the Abrahamic root of promise, and inheritors of
all its richness and fatness.--Eph. 2:12,13; Rom.
11.
Thus we see that these Spiritual
Israelites become the Israelites indeed, from the Divine standpoint, the actual
inheritors of the Abrahamic Covenant or promise; although we see also, yet to
be fulfilled, certain gracious earthly promises to the natural Seed of Abraham;
nevertheless they have missed, have lost, as a nation, as a people, the great
prize; as the Apostle declares, "Israel hath not obtained that which he
seeketh for; but the election hath obtained it, and the rest were
blinded."-- Rom. 11:7.
So, then, the "twelve
tribes" of Israel had promises made to them which apply not merely to
themselves, but also and specially to Spiritual Israel, whom they typified;
while the original election, or predestination, of God, respecting the
Abrahamic Seed, that it should be 144,000 or 12,000 from each tribe, still
stands; and consequently that each one accepted from among the Gentiles, and
engrafted into this root of Abrahamic promise, is counted as taking the place
of one of the broken-off branches of the various tribes.
By the time the Gospel Age shall
have finished its work, a Spiritual Israel will have been found--"a royal
priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people"--showing forth the praises
of him who called them out of darkness into his marvelous light--neither one
more nor one less than the original, elect, predetermined number--a natural
Israelite having been "broken off" for each one from the Gentiles
"grafted in." The Church is thus referred to in Revelation
7:3-8. And the sealing of the Church is spoken of as being so many from each of
the tribes, with the intimation that all of these will have been "sealed
in their foreheads" before the great time of trouble shall come upon the
world.
So, then, the Epistle of James is to
be understood as addressed to these true Israelites, engrafted into the root of
promise, and taking the place of the natural Israelites. And to this agree the
words of the Apostle Paul, "They are not all Israel
which are of Israel."
(Rom.
9:6,7.) And again, "He is not a Jew which is a Jew outwardly, neither is
that circumcision which is outward in the flesh; but he is a Jew which is one
inwardly, and circumcision is that of the heart." (Rom.
2:28,29.) And again, the words of our Lord in addressing his Church: "I
know the blasphemy of them which say they are Jews, and are not, but are of the
synagogue of Satan."--Rev. 2:9; 3:9.
Our Lord recognized this same
distinction between natural and true Israelites. When receiving Nathaniel he
declared, "Behold, an Israelite indeed." These two Israels, of the
flesh and of the spirit, were typified in Isaac and Ishmael, and again, as the
Apostle declares, [R4705 : page 340] in Jacob and
Esau. (Rom.
9:8-13,22-33.) In each case the inheritor of the promise was the younger
brother, illustrating that Spiritual Israel would be developed after natural Israel, and
take its place as heir of the chief blessings mentioned in the Abrahamic
Covenant. However, we are to remember that a blessing was granted also in each
case to the elder brother, in the types; and so it is in the antitypes. While
God has appointed Christ to be the heir of all things, and has called the
Church as his Bride, to be his joint-heir in all things, he has, nevertheless,
provided that blessing shall flow from these to the earthly seed, and in turn
through the latter to all the families of the earth.--Rom.
11:26-33.
Having thus definitely determined
that the Apostle is addressing the Church, let us consider the astounding
statement of our text, and seek to ascertain in what sense it should be
understood; resolving that, should we find that in any sense or degree it
applies to us individually, we will assuredly respond quickly to the spirit's
teaching, and correct so evil a condition.
CHRISTIANS
WHO CURSE MEN WITH THEIR TONGUES
We may readily see how the Apostle
means that God's people bless or praise his name with their tongues. They do so
in prayer; they do so in their hymns of praise; they do so in declaring his
Truth, and in witnessing to his providences on their behalf. In a word, we
bless God with our tongues by showing forth his praises, who called us out of
darkness into his marvelous light.
But in what sense does the Apostle
mean that Spiritual Israelites curse men with their tongues, and that so
commonly, so generally prevalent as to require public reproof? Surely no
Christian curses his fellow-man by oaths and profane swearing! But are there
not other ways in which our tongues may be a curse and an injury to fellow-men?
We are to remember that the meaning of our English word "curse" has
somewhat altered in common usage within the last century, having very generally
lost the sense of injury and assumed wholly the sense of swearing, profanity. In
the Greek language different words are used when referring to a cursing oath, viz.,
anathema, and anathematiso, used ten times in the New Testament; and when
referring to a spoken condemnation as a blight or curse, viz., katara and kataraomai,
which signify condemnation, to speak against, to speak evil of, to injure. The
latter is the word used by the Apostle James; hence his language really is--
With the same tongue wherewith we praise and honor God, we do injury to
fellow-men, by evil-speaking, slandering, etc.
Thus our Lord, using the same word,
said, "Bless them that curse [speak evil of] you." The Apostle Paul,
using the same word, admonishes God's people to "Bless and curse
not"--speak favorably of others, but do not speak injuriously of them. Again,
we are told that our Lord cursed (the same Greek word) the fig tree, saying,
"Let no fruit grow on thee henceforth"--he injured it, he made a
declaration unfavorable to its future development. Thus also the Apostle
declares that the Jews under the Law were under a curse--not that the Law was
evil, but that, because of imperfections of the flesh, the Israelites came
under the condemnation (curse) of the Law. He declares also that "Christ
hath redeemed us [formerly Jews] from the curse [condemnation] of the Law,
being made a curse for us"--having suffered for us the full condemnation
of blight which the Law imposed upon the transgressor. (Gal.
3:10-13.) He illustrated the same thought in connection with the word
"curse," when he declares that garden land which had been overgrown
with thorns and briars is "nigh unto cursing"--not ready for
profanity, but for condemnation, as unfit for tillage, until burned over and
its weeds exterminated.--Matt. 5:44; Rom.
12:14; Mark 11:21; Heb. 6:8.
Having thus before our minds the
real word, and its signification as used by the Apostle, we see that while curse
is a proper enough translation of the original, the whole difficulty is that
present-day common usage and common education have largely hidden from sight
this signification of the word. Similarly the word evil has lost its original
breadth of meaning, and is almost invariably considered to signify immorality,
badness, wickedness; whereas in its breadth of meaning it may be used to refer
to anything that is undesirable, not good, such as calamities, etc.
NO
EVIL TO WHICH THE LORD'S PEOPLE ARE MORE
EXPOSED
Looking at the Apostle's statement
from this standpoint, we see clearly that his charge is applicable to Christian
people of today to an alarming extent. How many there are who do injury with
their tongues to their fellow-creatures, who use the same tongue in offering
praise to God. We know of no evil to which God's consecrated people are more
exposed than to this one. With many it is as natural to gossip as to breathe. They
do it unconsciously. We have even known people who took cognizance of the
Scriptural injunction against slander and evil-speaking, who were so utterly
confused on the subject, and so unaware of their own conduct, that they would
declare their horror of speaking a slander in the very same breath in which
they utter slanders. We mention this in proof that this evil is so ingrained in
fallen human nature as to elude the notice of the new nature sometimes for
years--and thus escapes the correction in righteousness which the Lord's Word
directs, and which all who are truly the Lord's people desire.
Many are the peculiar subterfuges
which the fallen nature will use, in its attempt to stifle the voice of
conscience and yet maintain the use of this channel of evil --long after it has
been driven from evil practices which are less common, less popular, more
generally recognized as sinful.
(1) It will say, I mean no harm to
anybody; but I must have something to talk about, and nothing would be so
interesting to friends and neighbors as something which has more or less of a
gossipy flavor (scandal) connected with it. But is evil-speaking, slander, any
the more proper on this account for the children of the light? By no means.
Hence it is that the Scriptures instruct us, "Let your conversation be
such as becometh saints"; "Let your speech be with grace, seasoned
with salt, that ye may know how ye ought to answer every man"; "Let
no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good, to
the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers."--Phil. 1:27; Col. 4:6; Eph.
4:29.
But the scandal-monger, however
refined his methods and words, well knows that so far from the scandal
ministering grace to the hearer, it ministers evil; that the hearer is impelled
by the forces of his fallen human nature to go quickly and tell the scandal
further; true or false, he knows not and heeds not. It has kindled in his heart
a flame of carnal sentiment which issues from his lips to "set on fire the
course of nature" in others, similarly weak through the fall. The fallen
nature feasts and revels in just such things, feeling the more liberty to do so
because they delude themselves that thus they are moralizing--preaching against
sin, and that in thus discussing [R4705 : page 341] and
impliedly denouncing the said-to-be transgressions of another, they are
mentioning matters abhorrent to their righteous souls. Alas! poor, weak, fallen
humanity's reasonings are seriously defective when the Lord's counsels in
righteousness are ignored.
MUCH
FOR DISCUSSION ON THE SUBJECT OF THE
RICHES OF GOD'S GRACE
As for the point that there would be
little else to talk about if scandals were thoroughly eliminated from Christian
conversation, and all were to abide strictly by the Apostle's injunction,
"Speak evil of no man," we answer: Is there not a wide scope for
conversation amongst Christian people on the subject of the riches of God's
grace in Christ Jesus our Lord, expressed in the exceeding great and precious
promises of the Divine Word? In these things we have indeed that which not only
ministers grace to the hearer, but which adds also to the grace of the speaker.
It showers blessing on every hand, so far as the "new creature" is concerned,
and assists in deadening the old nature with its evil desires, tastes,
appetites.
This is what the Apostle had in
mind, evidently, when he said that the Lord's people should "show forth
the praises of him who called us out of darkness into his marvelous
light." And a heart filled with the spirit of love, the spirit of God, the
spirit of Truth, the spirit of the Master, will be sure to overflow that which
is within, for, "Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth
speaketh." An evil mouth, therefore, a mouth which does injury to others,
either to fellow-members of "the Body of Christ," or to those who are
without, indicates an evil heart, implies that the heart is not pure. "Blessed
are the pure in heart, for they shall see God."--I Pet.
2:9; Matt. 12:34; 5:8.
(2) Another excuse for gossip about
other men's matters is offered by others who say: I can talk about religious
matters to those who are religiously inclined, but when I am with worldly
people, or with professors of religion who take no interest in religious
themes, I must be agreeable and accommodating, and must at least hear their
gossip and news; and if I do not share in such conversation I would be
considered very peculiar, and my company would not be desired. Yes, we answer;
but this is to be one of the peculiarities of the "saints." They are
not only to be different from the world, but different also from the nominal
professors of religion. Their religion is not to be merely on the surface, and
on one day of the week, and under a certain suit of clothes; but is to be of
the heart, related to all the affairs of life, for every day and every moment. To
follow strictly the Divine injunction will indeed separate these from some who
are now their friends and who love such evil things-- forbidden us who have
become sons of God and who have received of his spirit of sonship, the spirit
of Love.
THE
WAY TO GLORY, HONOR AND IMMORTALITY
A
NARROW WAY
That our Lord understood and taught
that the way to glory, honor and immortality is a narrow one is evident. "If
any man would be my disciple, let him deny himself and take up his cross and
follow me." And again-- "Strive to enter in at the strait gate, for
strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth unto life, and few there
be who find it." If, therefore, your failure to be an entertaining
visitor, neighbor, friend, is because of your fidelity as a "new
creature" to the law of Christ, Love--which "worketh no ill to his
neighbor," either in word or deed--then indeed you have cause for rejoicing,
because you are suffering a little, experiencing a loss, for Christ's sake, for
righteousness' sake. The loss may at first seem heavy, but if you endure it for
Christ's sake, in obedience to his righteous law of Love, you will soon be able
to say with the Apostle that such losses are "light afflictions," not
worthy to be compared with the offsetting blessings.--Phil.
3:7,8; 2 Cor. 4:17.
Your cause for rejoicing is that you
have the Lord's promise that such suffering shall work out for your good. Companionship
with those who are not seeking to walk according to the mind of the spirit, but
according to the common "course of this world," is injurious to the
saints, to those who are seeking to walk in harmony with the new mind. They are
far better off without such worldly companions and friends, and in proportion
as they are separated from these they will find closer fellowship with the Lord
himself and with his Word, and with all who are true members of his Body, and
under the direction of his Spirit.
It is in harmony with this that the
Scriptures declare, in so many words, that the friendship of this world
signifies enmity against God. (Jas. 4:4.) God has purposely
placed the matter in such a position that his people must take their choice,
and lose either the Divine friendship and fellowship, or the worldly friendship
and fellowship; because those things which the Lord loves are distasteful to
the worldly, and those things which the worldly love, evil deeds and evil thoughts,
evil-speaking, are an abomination in the sight of the Lord, and those who love
and practice such things lose his fellowship--they are not of his Spirit. "If
any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his."--Rom. 8:9.
(3) Another way by which some
otherwise good Christian people avoid this question, and justify themselves in
this common fault of humanity, is by confining themselves (as they think) to
the truth. But they never know how frequently their gossip-loving natures
pervert their judgment and lead them to accept as truth, things respecting
which they have little or no knowledge. Nor are such anxious to know more,
after they have circulated a slander with their stamp of verity on it. To find
it untrue would prove them "false witnesses" and put them to trouble
to correct the lie. The pride of the natural mind objects and refuses to
believe the truth under such circumstances. Thus one evil leads to another.
HOW
THE DEPRAVED TASTE HEDGES BEHIND
CONSCIENCE
Such will say, "Oh, I never tell
anything for truth until I positively know it to be true--of my own
observation, my own personal knowledge. Anything that I do not know of myself
to be true I am always careful to so state, and say, I have heard thus and so,
or, I am told thus and so; I do not vouch for the truth of it myself. Thus I am
sure that I always avoid speaking evil of anyone." Perhaps there is no
more common delusion on this subject than is thus expressed. The depraved taste
hedges itself behind conscience, and declares that it is always right to speak
the truth, and hence God cannot have meant that speaking the truth would be
slander, but that in condemning evil-speaking and slander, as works of the
flesh and the Devil, he must have meant the speaking of that which is false, untrue.
This is a great mistake. A slander
is equally a slander, whether it is true or whether it is false, and is so
regarded, not only in the law of God, but also in the laws of civilized men. True,
in human law, if a suit were brought for slander, if it were proven that the
charges made by the slanderer had some basis of fact, that would probably be
considered by the Court and jury an extenuating [R4705
: page 342] circumstance, and would probably very much reduce the amount of
the verdict for damages. A slander is anything which is uttered with the
intention of injury to another, whether true or false, and the laws of men
agree with the law of God, that such injury to another is wrong.
In other words, Divine and human
laws agree that a first wrong does not justify a second wrong. Human law says,
If a wrong has been committed, the Courts are open to the injured one to seek
redress or the punishment of the evil doer; but the injured one shall not be
permitted to take the remedy into his own hands, either by making an assault
with physical force or by the use of the more subtle weapon, the tongue, to
assassinate his reputation with the poisoned stiletto of envy and malice. True,
many slanderers are never prosecuted; true also, the newspapers of the United
States many times escape heavy damages for libelous slander by the plea that
they do not publish the defamations as of malice, but simply as news, which,
they claim, properly belong to the public, as in the cases of politicians who
are seeking the franchises of the people for positions of public trust. Then
again, public men, knowing that much of the false statements by the opposition
press will be properly credited as falsehoods, consider it good policy to let
any ordinary slanders go unchallenged in the Courts. The effect is a gradual
growth of slander among the people, sure to work evil to themselves and to
their institutions; for government officers and courts and everybody of
influence coming under such slanders (generally, we believe, untrue) lose their
influence for good over the lower classes, who are thus being helped along to
greater lawlessness day by day, and preparing for the period of anarchy which
the Scriptures tell us is near at hand.
THE
LAW OF LOVE COMMANDS THAT WE "SPEAK EVIL
OF NO MAN"
But the Law of God, the Law of
Christ, goes much further and deeper into such matters, naturally, than do the
laws of men; for it deals not with men, but with the "new creatures in
Christ Jesus"--transformed by the renewing of their minds, and under
special Covenant relationship, and bound by the law of Love, which
"worketh no ill to his neighbor," under any circumstances, under any
provocation, but, on the contrary, returns "good for evil,"
"blessing for cursing."
The Law of Love commands silence to
all who acknowledge that law and the Law-Giver, saying, "Speak evil of no
man." (Titus 3:2.) It goes further than this and
declares against evil thoughts, evil suspicions, evil surmisings against
neighbors. It declares that love filling our hearts will not only hinder evil
conduct and injurious words, but will even prevent evil thoughts--"Love thinketh
no evil." The new creature possessing it can be convinced of evil only by
indisputable proofs. Indeed, to impress this subject and its importance in his
sight, the Great Teacher declares to the pupils in his school-- With what
judgment ye judge others, I will judge you. (Matt. 7:1.) And
again he tells them to pray to the Father--"Forgive us our trespasses, as
we forgive those who trespass against us." (Matt. 6:12.)
Again he declares. If at heart ye treasure up resentment against others, the
Heavenly Father will not forgive you.-- Matt. 18:35.
Ah! indeed, a Christian after the
Lord's pattern, a graduate of the school of Christ and prepared to teach
others, is one who not only outwardly, but inwardly also, is clean--separated,
washed by the water of Divine instruction, from the meanness, the filthiness of
the flesh. He is no longer the slave of sin, controlled by the desires and
weaknesses of his fallen flesh and its spirit of the world, bearing fruits unto
unrighteousness--anger, malice, hatred, strife, slander, evil-speaking. (Col. 3:8; I Pet. 2:1,2.) From his high
standpoint of appreciation of the Divine law, the advanced Christian sees that
in the Lord's sight hatred is murder, slander is assassination, and the
destruction of a neighbor's good name is robbery and rapine. And any of these
things done in the Church, among the professed people of God, is doubly
evil--the assassination and robbery of a brother.--Compare I
John 3:15 and Matt. 5:21,22.
THE
NATURAL HEART IS DECEITFUL AND DESPERATELY
WICKED
To utter a defamatory or injurious
remark against another, and then to add, "I do not know whether it is true
or not," is to show that the speaker is exercised by an evil spirit and
not by the Spirit of Christ, the spirit of love--he wishes to injure or curse
his fellow-creature, is anxious to do so. He would feel restrained to some
extent from telling what he knew to be absolutely untrue, but delights to speak
evil, and is glad to know that he may roll it as a sweet morsel over his
tongue, and hence speaks of even those scandals which he does not know to be
true, and attempts to excuse himself with such an apology as the above.
Verily, it is with force that the Scriptures
declare that the natural heart is deceitful above all things and desperately
wicked. Those who thus speak, and thus attempt to justify their misconduct,
have either never entered the school
of Christ, or are as yet
only in the infant class, and do not know that theirs is the spirit of murder,
and not the spirit of brotherly love. Oh! that all true Christians might learn
the scope of this law of Love, in its relationship not only to God, but also to
fellowmen; what a bridling of tongues it would mean, what a carefulness of
speech! As David said, "I will take heed to my ways, that I sin not with
my tongue." And he who watches his tongue is putting a detective upon his
deceitful heart and can the better know it and master it, for "out of the
abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh."--Jer. 17:9;
Psa. 39:1; Matt. 12:34.
The only exception to this rule,
"Speak evil of no man," would come in where we might know of an
absolute necessity for making known an evil--where the relating of the evil
would be contrary to our heart's wishes, and only mentioned because of
necessity--because of love for others who, if not informed, might be injured. For
instance, the law of the land demands that, if we know of murder having been
committed, it shall not be considered slander, but on the contrary be
considered duty, to make known to the proper officers of the law the facts (not
suspicions) which have come under our observation. Likewise, if we knew of some
weakness in a brother or sister, and realized that another brother or sister
was about to be placed in a dangerous position by reason of that weakness, it
might become our duty to make known, either to the individual or congregation
liable to be injured, so much of our knowledge of facts (not suspicions) as
might be necessary to guard against injury through the weakness mentioned. But
this would not be speaking evil, but, on the contrary, would be speaking with a
good motive, with the intention of preserving the one party from extraordinary
temptation, and of preserving the other party from injury. And before anything
should be said on the subject we should most positively satisfy our own
consciences that [R4705 : page 343] our motive in
speaking is a good one, and not an evil one; that we are about to use our
tongue to bless, and not to injure. And even then, prompted by the spirit of
love and kindness toward the weak brother, as well as toward the others, we
should avoid mentioning one solitary item that would not be necessary to the
object in view.
"DOTH
A FOUNTAIN SEND FORTH AT THE SAME
OPENING BITTER WATER AND SWEET?"
But some will object to limiting
this liberty to cases of positive knowledge, and urge that absolute knowledge
generally being small little could be said. We answer that this is in line with
the Divine law--"Love thy neighbor as thyself." You would not want
your neighbor to use brain and tongue in evil surmises and slander against you;
and you should not do so to him. The law of the land does not demand that you
should tell one word more than you know (of personal knowledge) against your
neighbor; it does not ask your suspicions and evil surmisings. And on the
contrary, the law of the Lord commands that all under the law of love shall not
utter one solitary suspicion against a neighbor; and that if suspicion beyond
knowledge is forced upon the mind by associated circumstances, the new mind
shall promptly, with its native benevolence, counterbalance the suspicions by
suggestions of the possibility of misinformation or misinterpretation and
always give the apparently guilty the benefit of the doubt.
Another will object--"Oh! I
could never waste so much time in getting at facts. Life is too short! Why, I
would have no time at all left for my own business, if I carefully hunted up
the facts so as always to speak from knowledge and never from hearsay!"
Just so! and the lesson to you
should be to follow the Scriptural rule--"Speak evil of no man!"
(1) Because you have not the time to
get at the facts, and quite probably also lack the ability to judge
impartially, if you had all the facts before you.
(2) Because, if you have the Spirit
of Christ, love, dwelling in you richly, you will prefer to tell no one the
facts, even if you have the chain of evidence complete. You will loathe the
matter the more in proportion as the known facts are unfavorable. What, then,
must be the condition of those who have itching ears for scandal and of those
whose tongues delight in scandal as a sweet morsel, and are anxious to scatter
an evil report of which they have no knowledge--only prejudiced hearsay? The
most generous view possible of such is that they have little of the Spirit of
Christ; that they are deficient in brotherly love and have never truly learned
"the golden rule."
The Apostle inquires, "Doth a
fountain send forth at the same opening bitter water and sweet?" The form
of his question implies the answer, No; it is either good water only, or
brackish water only. He evidently wishes to suggest that we apply the same rule
to our hearts and mouths: How is it possible if our hearts have been renewed
that our mouths utter loving sweetness to God and bitter acrimony, envy,
hatred, strife, towards or respecting our fellowmen?
THE
TREASURE OF THE NEW MIND IN AN EARTHEN
VESSEL
There is but one way of
understanding the foregoing question Scripturally. It is expressed by the
Apostle Paul (2 Cor. 4:7), "We have this treasure [the
new heart, the new mind, the new nature] in an earthen vessel." Not that
Christians are of two natures, for that thought is contrary to the science of
the Bible. No mixture of natures can be recognized; hence it was that our human
natures were justified through faith in Jesus' blood and a renouncement of sin
and a consecration to death, that instead we might have spiritual natures and
become "new creatures in Christ Jesus." The new creature, however, is
as yet only in embryo, possessing only the new mind which dwells in and
proposes to regulate and govern the mortal bodies, which are considered dead so
far as the will of the flesh is concerned.
When, therefore, our mouths are
speaking forth heartfelt praise to God, who hath blessed us, lifted our feet
from the horrible pit, and the miry clay, and placed us upon the Rock Christ
Jesus, and has put a new song into our mouth, our praise implies that the new
mind is controlling at such a time, that the new heart is overflowing in the
mortal body, and going forth through the lips to the blessing and edification,
the comfort and encouragement of those who hear. Thus the fountain in our heart
is sending forth sweet waters, carrying with them life, blessing, refreshment. But
when our tongues speak evil of any, whether it be true or false, it implies
that the new nature is, temporarily at least, overcome by the old nature; it
implies that another fountain is now operating and using the tongue, the mouth,
in issuing forth the words of malice or hatred or envy or strife or reproach or
evil speaking of any kind--cursing or injuring others in any degree, great or
small.
This implies that the flesh is not
being kept under, kept dead, kept buried, kept out of sight. Such a condition,
therefore, implies slow spiritual development or retrogression--falling away on
the part of the "new creature." All such should remember, as the Apostle
Paul declares, "The time past of our lives sufficeth us to have wrought
the will of the Gentiles." Again, he says, "Yield not your members as
instruments of unrighteousness; but yield yourselves unto God, as those that
are alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness unto
God."--I Pet. 4:3; Rom. 6:13.
"PURGE
OUT THE OLD LEAVEN"
From this point of view we may
console ourselves if, in looking backward, we perceive that in our own cases
from the same mouth has proceeded praise to God and injury and defamation and
slander and evil-speaking, or any of these evil propensities, toward our
fellow-creatures. It does not, therefore, prove that our hearts were not truly
justified, and sanctified by the holy Spirit of adoption; it does not prove
that we are not sons of God and partakers of his Spirit. It does prove,
however, that we are in a sadly improper condition--spiritually sick and in
need of taking a purgative; as the Apostle expresses it, "Purge out,
therefore, the old leaven [malice, etc.], that ye may be a new [unadulterated,
pure] lump" or loaf--proper representatives of the Body of Christ.--I Cor. 5:7.
We may know assuredly that, until
the "new creature" gains a thorough victory over the flesh, we will
not be winners of the great prize which is promised only "to him that
overcometh." The overcoming, however, will be not in the perfecting of the
flesh, but in the perfecting of the heart--the will, the intentions. As for the
blemishes of the flesh, some of them, undoubtedly, despite every effort on our
part to eradicate them, will continue with us so long as we are in the flesh. The
perfection which is to be hoped for, therefore, and aimed at and expected and
gained by the overcomers, is the perfection of the will, heart,
intentions--"Blessed are the pure in heart; they shall see God." [R4705 : page 344]
Moreover, our physical weaknesses
and defects not only vary in kind but in intensity. Some are by nature more
inclined to gentleness, kindness, etc.; others, until accepted of Christ, may
have very uncouth, coarse, rude, rough earthen vessels. And while the influence
of the treasure within, the "new mind," will be sure in any case to
exercise a modifying and transforming effect upon the earthen vessel, we cannot
expect as much of a change in some as in others. We cannot expect as complete a
correction in righteousness in the outward man, where coarseness, rudeness,
unkindness are, so to speak, bred in the bone and fibre, as we might expect in
one born to fine sensibilities.
While recognizing this difference of
"earthen vessels," we, of course, must use our best endeavors each to
correct his own. We are to remember that our relationship to one another in the
Body of Christ is not according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit;
hence, as the Apostle declares, we know one another no longer according to the
flesh, with its weaknesses, imperfections and ungainly and ungraceful natural
tendencies. We know each other only according to the Spirit, according to the
intentions, according to the heart--as "new creatures," not as old
creatures.--2 Cor. 5:16.
This will lead us to be very pitiful
of one another's imperfections of the flesh, so long as we have the assurance
that the flesh does not represent our brother's real self, his mind, his will. We
are, therefore, to be gentle toward all, "kindly affectioned one toward
another," so that so far from desiring to wound one another, or to injure
one another, or to devour one another with our tongues, we shall sympathize
with each other, do each other good, and, by words of grace and comfort, or by
admonition and reproof spoken in love, may "build one another up in the
most holy faith"--in the likeness of our Lord and Master.
Proceeding with this subject, the
Apostle points out that there are two kinds of wisdom, a heavenly and an
earthly, and that all of the Lord's people should discern these, and should see
to it that theirs is the heavenly. The Apostle's intimation is that there may
be some with the Church, who may have counted themselves in the Church, who may
have associated themselves with the Church from worldly-wise motives--some who
have caught sight of the fact that there is a reasonableness and a wisdom in
the teachings of the Scriptures which they admire and which they can turn,
perhaps, to their own advantage. These, he implies, will be inclined to be
heady and to make a show of their wisdom, and to be "puffed up" by
it, and while outwardly acknowledging the propriety of the Christian graces,
brotherly-kindness, gentleness, meekness, patience, love, they have in their
hearts bitter envyings and strife--strife to have name and fame --envying those
who may seem to them to have more of these.
These, the Apostle intimates, will
find it difficult, yea, impossible, to avoid cursing (speaking evil of,
injuring) the brethren. It will be so natural to them to do so that they cannot
avoid it, because they have not pure hearts-- they have not regenerated hearts.
If their hearts ever were regenerated, they have returned like the sow to
wallowing in the mire--like the dog to his vomit. The Apostle's advice to such
as find that they have in their hearts envious and bitter feelings, is that
they have no cause to glory or to boast, but on the contrary should acknowledge
that, having these evil conditions in the heart, they are not Christians at
all, and they should cease to lie against the truth--cease to act fraudulently,
hypocritically --cease to continue to claim to have renewed hearts, sanctified
in Christ Jesus.
He tells such plainly that their
wisdom, their knowledge, is not of God, is not of the holy Spirit--"This
wisdom descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish; for, where
envy and strife are, there is confusion and every evil work [to be
anticipated]."-- Jas. 3:15,16.
It seems evident that although the
Apostle James' denunciation applies to any professing to be Israelites indeed,
he nevertheless is specially aiming his remarks at those who profess to be
teachers in the Church, to have wisdom to a considerable degree. And his words
remind us of the words of the Apostle Paul; when speaking of the various gifts
distributed to the Church, he seemingly points out the dangers of those of
large knowledge, and, as an illustration of this principle which James presents,
he says:--
"THOUGH
I SPEAK WITH THE TONGUES OF MEN AND
OF ANGELS AND HAVE NOT LOVE"
Though I could speak with the
tongues of men and of angels, and have not Love, it would imply that I had
become as a sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal, making a noise indeed, but
having no feeling respecting the matter myself--I have neither part nor lot
with those who possess the Spirit of Christ. Although I have the gift of
prophecy, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and though I have all
faith, and have not Love, I am nothing; and though I bestow all my goods to
feed the poor, and give my body to be burned, and have not Love, it profiteth
me nothing.--I Cor. 13:1-8.
Thus the Apostle points out
distinctly that knowledge and oratory are not the most vital tests, but that
Love, permeating the heart and extending out through all the course of life,
and actuating and operating our mortal bodies, is the real test--the real proof
of our Divine relationship. He points out that those who had received gifts of
God before they had come into a proper relationship to God might become
sounding brass and tinkling cymbals, and thus become "nothing," if
they lose the love, if they lose the Spirit of Christ; for "if any man
have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his."
It is well for the Lord's people to
take particular note of these Divine instructions from two of the chiefest of
the Apostles, and to remember that, valuable though they be, neither oratory
nor knowledge is to be considered amongst the "brethren" as sure
proofs of their being in the right way, nor that their influence might not be
injurious instead of helpful. The leading characteristic to be looked for in
everyone accepted as a servant of the Church, to minister in holy things, should
be first of all the spirit of Love. We do not mean to say that knowledge and
ability should be entirely ignored, but we do mean to say that these should be
considered of secondary and not of primary importance, as is always the
tendency.
Select from among yourselves, holy
men, full of the holy Spirit, that they may have the charge of the spiritual
interests of the different companies of the Lord's people. And for a Divine
explanation of how this holy Spirit will manifest itself, of the qualities, therefore,
that are to be looked for in the servants of the Church, see I
Cor. 13:4-8; also I Pet. 1:22,23; 2 Pet.
1:1-13. For their own good, as well as for the good of the Church, all who,
having other qualifications, give evidence of being puffed up and of desiring
to lord it over God's heritage (the Church), or who manifest envy, strife,
bitterness, evil-speaking--these should be passed by, as giving evidence of
having the wrong spirit, that cometh [R4705 : page 345] not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish. They are unsafe
teachers, and are likely to do more harm than good, with whatever knowledge
they may possess.
"THE
WISDOM THAT COMETH FROM ABOVE," ETC.
Continuing, the Apostle leaves no
doubt respecting his meaning, for he distinctly outlines the course and
fruitage of heavenly wisdom, saying, "The wisdom that is from above is
first pure"--truthful, honest, sincere, not put on, not used as a garment
of light to deceive and to cover up selfishness, malice, hatred, strife; it
makes no compromises with sin, impurity, in any shape or form.
It is "peaceable."--So far
from being a quarrelsome, bickering disposition, the "new mind"
desires peace; it will "contend earnestly for the faith once delivered
unto the saints," but it will not contend simply from a love of
contention, a love of strife; on the contrary, the new mind is peaceably
inclined, would prefer, so far as possible, to yield a non-essential point in a
controversy; it loves its opponents and sympathizes with their difficulties.
It is "gentle"--not rude
or coarse, not rough in action or word or tone; and if the earthen vessel
through which it speaks have these rudenesses ingrained by nature, the
"new nature" regrets them, strives against them, and seeks to conquer
them; and where they do injury to others is ready, willing, glad to apologize,
and to remove the smart.
It is "easy to be
entreated"--easy of approach, not haughty, not disdainful, not hard or
cruel; yet it is firm on matters of principle; principles cannot be bended or
modified; they belong to God. But while affirming the principles, this spirit
of wisdom points out its own willingness to moderation, by acknowledging any
good features in its opponent, and by pointing out the reason why no
modification is possible in relation to Divine laws and principles.
It is "full of mercy and good
fruits."--It delights in all things prompted by love and kindness; it
takes pleasure in doing for others; it takes pleasure, not only in showing
mercy to dumb animals under its care, but it especially delights in mercy in
dealing with brethren in respect to their faults. It is merciful also in the
family--not over-exacting, but generous, kind, benevolent. It is generous also
with opponents, and those who are contentious--not wishing to push a victory,
even for the truth, to such a point as would be injurious, hurtful, unmerciful
to the antagonist.
It is "without
partiality."--It loves the good, the true, where these are found; and
opposes the untrue, the impure and the unholy, whether found amongst friends or
enemies. Its justice is of the strictest kind, tempered with mercy; it will not
approve a fault in a brother, because he is a brother, but would reprove the
same with gentleness and meekness, remembering the liability of all to the
assaults of the world, the flesh and the Devil. It will not fail to see a
virtue in an enemy, nor hesitate to acknowledge it. Truth is its standard, not
prejudice, not partyism, not sectarianism.
It is "without
hypocrisy."--It is thoroughly candid; it needs not to feign love, because
it is love; it needs not to put on a kindly exterior and to smother feelings of
wrath and envy and strife, for it is without envy, without strife. Such works
of the flesh and of the Devil have, by the grace of God, been seen to be
earthly, sensual, devilish, and have been repudiated, and the heart has been
justified, cleansed, sanctified to God, renewed in thought, intention, will,
and is now full of the treasure of the holy Spirit.
With these thoughts before our
minds, let us all, dear readers, more earnestly than ever, guard against the
old nature, and its insidious attempts to gain control over our tongues. Let
us, more and more, seek to appreciate, in ourselves and in others, this
heavenly wisdom, whose operation is so forcefully presented by the Apostle. The
more important our members, the more influential, the more earnestly ought we
to strive to keep them in full subjection to the Lord, as his servants. Our
feet are useful members, consecrated to the Lord; we may use them in many
errands of mercy, to the glory of his name and to the profit of his people. Our
hands are likewise useful, if thoroughly consecrated to the Lord's service. Our
ears are also useful in his service, to hear for him, to refuse to hear the
evil, and thus to approve evil, and to set a good example to others. Our eyes
are a great blessing from the Lord, and they also are to be kept from evil,
from the lust of the eye and the pride of life, and are to be instruments or
servants of righteousness, in seeing the good, in appreciating the good, and in
assisting the good, and in helping us to know the will of our God.
"THE
TONGUE SET ON FIRE OF GEHENNA"
But of all our members the most
influential is the tongue. The tongue's influence exceeds that of all our other
members combined. To control it, therefore, in the Lord's service, is the most
important work of the Lord's people in respect to their mortal bodies and the
service of these rendered to the Lord. A few words of love, kindness,
helpfulness--how often have such changed the entire course of a human life! Yea!
How much they have had to do with moulding the destiny of nations! And how
often have evil words, unkind words, slanderous words, done gross injustice,
assassinated reputations, etc.! As the Apostle declares, the tongue is capable
of setting on fire the whole course of nature--awakening passions, strifes,
enmities, at first unthought of. No wonder he declares such tongues "set
on fire of Gehenna"--the Second Death!
The public servants of the Church
are to some extent specially its "tongues," and what an influence they
wield for good or for evil, in the blessing and upbuilding of the Lord's
people, or for their injury--cursing. How necessary that all the tongue-servants
of the Lord's Body be such, and such only, as are of his spirit. Their
influence not only extends to those who are in the Church, but in considerable
measure they are mouthpieces heard outside. And the same principle applies to
every individual member of the Church, in his use of his member, his tongue. He
may use it wisely or unwisely, with heavenly wisdom or with earthly wisdom. He
may use it for strife, and tearing down the faith and character of the
brethren, in overthrowing love and confidence, or he may use it in building up
these graces of the Spirit.
How many have proved the truth of
the Apostle's words--that the tongue has great possibilities for defiling the
whole Body, the Church, and setting on fire the course of nature, by stirring
up the evil passions and propensities of the fallen nature! How few amongst the
Lord's people have conquered the tongue to the extent of bringing it into
subjection to the will of God, that they may minister good, and only good, to
all with whom they come in contact! Let us, dearly beloved, be fully resolved
that by Divine grace (promised to assist us) we shall witness great progress in
our control of this most important member of our bodies, bringing the same into
full subjection and obedience and service to the King of kings and Lord of
lords--to him "who hath called us out of darkness into his marvelous
light."
W.T. R-4705 a : page 339 – 1910 r.