
Pastors are among those who are the most prolific in their use of words and speech. Whether teaching, preaching, counseling, or writing, the words that an average minister uses in a given week must be in the tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands.
When those words are good and wholesome, then those who receive them do so as a refreshing stream from a cool brook (Prov. 18:4). But when words are weaponized and used in order to afflict pain, they can be like the thrust of a sword that cuts deeply (Prov. 12:18). For anyone who has been cut to ribbons, you understand this picture well.
The use of words is so powerful, that in today’s Wall Street Journal, Gerard Baker wrote an opinion piece regarding the way that words are used in times of war to bring about courage, as well as how they can be used as propaganda to destroy and confuse.
“John F. Kennedy said of Winston Churchill that he “mobilized the English language and sent it into battle.” From Pericles to Abraham Lincoln, words have often been as effective as armaments in shoring up a people’s defenses, reinforcing an army’s resolve, or inspiring a unit’s bravery. But in war, as in peace, words can also be used to demoralize and disorient. They can be used—and have been—more deviously by the enemy, and its quill-, microphone- and laptop-carrying enablers and propagandists, to obfuscate and confuse, to seed doubt in a just cause.”(1)
James 3:1 is a particularly strong passage for those who teach the Word of God because it is a warning to us. Since we trade in the use of words, we can become adept at it—wordsmiths who fashion sentences and paragraphs along logical lines of argumentation. In service to King Jesus, this is excellent. It is when we use these skills to smith words of destruction and pridefully destroy others that we must be careful of and when we make a blade to cut others to shreds, we must repent.
I must admit that I somewhat understand the struggle of men like Martin Luther, who was coarse in his language at times. He was in a fierce battle, and when in battle, we can lay aside niceties and civility because we are in the heat of fending off a virulent enemy. Luther lived in a time that demanded much from him—and yet it did not excuse Luther from the sin he committed by his tongue and pen, and it does not excuse me—or you.
In many ways, we must exhibit the grace of our Savior who went to battle with the powers of darkness and yet did not sin. He gave not an inch to the enemy—either in his ministry or his heart. We must follow as closely to our Lord in this as we possibly can. As Christ’s own, we are not at liberty to use the tactics of the enemy when we speak, write, and teach. We cannot use words that bite and tear, and ultimately destroy those for whom Christ died. If we do so, we do not walk in the pathway of Christ.
It is not “anything goes” in these days of moral warfare. We must take the higher ground, we must speak truth at all costs but always seasoned with salt. The grace of Christ must always emerge from our lips, and we must not speak as if we belong to the enemy—whether in the pulpit, at our keyboards, or in our homes. May Jesus Christ be sovereign over our mouths as much as our hearts.
(1) (Gerard Baker, Wall Street Journal, Opinion 11/7/2023, https://www.wsj.com/articles/hamas-defenders-wield-words-as-weapons-91713cee?st=an53x27bv366061&reflink=article_copyURL_share)