Speaking
Wisely
“Do
you love life; do you relish the chance to enjoy good things? Then you must
keep your tongue from evil and keep your lips from speaking lies!”
Psalm 34:12-13 (Common English Bible)
It is a
rhetorical question, of course. Who doesn’t want to be thoroughly alive,
enjoying all the good things that life has to offer, to be lifted above the
plane of mere existence? To live a large life, a life of spacious activities
and with a grand purpose captures our imaginations. This is a life of abounding
energy and possesses a deep awareness of the things that bless – both
personally and those around us.
The Psalms
offer treasured insight for such a life, insight for embracing a spacious life
of blessedness, of extracting the secret flavors and essences of things as we
live into each day. Very specifically, we are instructed in the wisdom of many
who have traveled before us; we are told to exercise wise government over our
tongues. Relationships with one another rise to unimaginable heights as the
tongue is disciplined and directed to build, to edify and exalt those who hear
us. It is as though life receives its nutriments from careful and blessed
speech.
Our speech is
too often destructive. Poison-soaked speech first poisons the speaker. “Every
word we speak recoils upon the speaker’s heart, leaves its influence, either in
grace or disfigurement,” writes that wonderful preacher, J.H. Jowett.1
Where the tongue is untrue the heart is afraid of exposure. Life is diminished.
One may also argue that such speech is lazy speech. Where there is no exercise
of restraint or government of the tongue; it is free to roam at will.
Therefore, urges the Psalms, keep your tongue from evil and speaking lies. The
tongue that is held in severe restriction, the tongue that only shapes words
that are good and encouraging to others results in quiet and fruitful
happiness.
Undisciplined
tongues seem to flourish today. And the world is the poorer for it. Yet, our
own lives may move to a higher plane simply by a personal revolt from the
disorderly conduct of tongues. The best way to affect a departure from the
guile and venom that flows freely around us is to exercise one’s self in active
good, of words spoken kindly, with pleasantness and grace. The fragrance of our
speech will tickle the hearts of others. It may invite them to share in the
same wisdom of the Psalms, an invitation to experience a blessed life, full,
safe and abounding in good things.
____________________
1J.H.
Jowett, Thirsting for the Springs:
Twenty-Six Weeknight Meditations (London: H.R. Allenson, Limited,
1907), 188.
This blog is taken from Doug Hood's Heart & Soul, Volume 2, which will be published in the near future.
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