Water sustains life, but it can also drown you. Fire keeps you warm, but it can also burn you. What matters is the intent and purpose with which they are used. Nobody drowns in a glass of water or gets burned to a crisp by a flickering candle. Likewise, the tongue can be used to bless or to curse, but if it has chosen a course, it must stick to it, for it cannot curse with one breath and bless with the other.
James 3:8-12, “But no man can tame the tongue. It is an
unruly evil, full of deadly poison. With it we bless our God and Father, and
with it we curse men who have been made in the similitude of God. Out of the
same mouth proceed blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not to
be so. Does a spring send forth fresh water and bitterness from the same
opening? Can a fig tree, my brethren, bear olives, or a grapevine bear figs?
Thus no spring yields both salt water and fresh.”
Back when I was still a kid and living with my parents in
Southern California, there was a corner bodega that served 75% alcohol, and the
rest was chips, candy, and various sponge cakes with mystery filling. On any
given day, you’d find a handful of neighborhood kids and a few alchies in
there, the kids digging through their pockets to see if they had enough for
some Twinkies and chocodiles they could divide among themselves, and the
alchies begging for hooch on credit promising they were good for it. One day,
one of them even went so far as to say he left his wallet in his other car,
which got a good laugh from the Indian fellow running the joint.
Then, one spring, everything changed. The Indian gentleman
decided to invest in his business and managed to cram a soft serve machine into
the already crowded shop, and for the small, small price of twenty-five cents,
you had your option of vanilla, chocolate, or the swirl. Granted, this was no
custard or dairy-based ice cream. It tasted like sweet water with a bunch of
coloring, and that was the vanilla. The chocolate didn’t taste like chocolate,
but a quarter was a quarter, and when it got hot, the kids would be lining up.
All the kids in the neighborhood were some flavor of
immigrant. There weren’t any real, authentic Americans except for the landlord,
who would come around to collect the rent every month. Among the motley crew of
kids left home alone because their parents were at work was Tran, a Vietnamese
boy who had an analytical mind. He concluded that if he asked for vanilla on
the bottom and pretended to change his mind halfway through, he’d get more ice
cream overall because whoever was pulling the lever couldn’t stop the machine
fast enough. I tried to explain they probably wouldn’t do it since that’s what
the swirl was for, but he’d heard from somewhere that the customer was always
right.
Shortly after the bodega opened, Tran put his plan into
motion. He went in and innocently asked for vanilla, waited until the cone was
over halfway full, and then said, “Oh, I think I want chocolate.” Without
missing a beat, the man threw the cone with the vanilla in the trash, pulled a
fresh cone from the box, and filled it with chocolate.
“Vanilla, chocolate, or swirl,” the man said, handing the
cone to Tran. “No fourth option.”
When it comes to the tongue, the swirl is not an option. It
either speaks life or death, hope or despair, healing or hurt. James calls out
those out of whose mouths proceed both blessing and cursing, insisting that it
ought not to be so.
What we strive for isn’t to tame the tongue with practiced
silence or hacks like counting to five or taking three deep breaths before we
say something but to transform our natures, thereby nullifying the tongue and the
predisposition to use it as a poison whip.
Even the best-trained tiger is still a tiger. Perhaps he has
been tamed temporarily, but his nature is still that of a carnivorous predator.
If you doubt it, ask Siegfried & Roy. Any man who believes he’s tamed his
tongue without a transformed nature is akin to the tiger that made a snack out
of their handler’s face. You may think you have it under control and that it is
yours to command and do your bidding until you find yourself halfway through a monologue
that burned every bridge you’d ever built in two minutes flat.
What James is trying to explain echoes Jesus when He said you
will know a tree by its fruit. A spring cannot send forth fresh water and
bitterness from the same source. It must be either one or the other.
By the same token, no matter how much it may want to, a bad
tree cannot bear good fruit. It may try to, it may desire to, it may attempt to
mimic what the good tree bearing good fruit is doing, but unless it too becomes
a good tree, it will never bear good fruit.
An individual can try to work on themselves, they can go to
therapy, learn to love themselves, let go, meet their inner child, grow as a
person, or whatever other buzz phrase is popular on a given day, but unless
they are born again, that particular train is going to fly off the tracks and
crash into whatever is standing in its way.
It’s the people who think they can make themselves bear good fruit when unregenerate that end up saying, I’ve been trying to be so good for so long, but then something happened, and it all got derailed. If you want to spring forth fresh water, you must change the source of where the water that flows through you comes from. There’s no way around this truth, though many have tried to find other avenues.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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