Jun
21
2017
Deadly wildfires are in the news again. In central Portugal a large forest fire has claimed over sixty lives and has yet to be contained. At first the fire was thought to originate with a lightning strike but a BBC report today indicates that a “criminal hand” might have actually caused the massive fire. We know from history that it doesn’t take much to start a giant forest fire. A single match or a carelessly discarded cigarette can start a blaze that takes lives, destroys homes, kills wildlife and devastates a forest. That is why we must be very careful when handling such objects.
I thought of the Portugal fire as I was studying the third chapter of the book of James this week. In this section James talks about the deadly potential of the tongue. He notes that though the tongue is small it has a way of directing or controlling our lives. James compares the tongue to a bit that controls a large horse and to a relatively small rudder that directs a giant ship. Then James says “Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small spark. The tongue also is a fire, a world of evil among the parts of the body.” (vs. 5-6)
The graphic images that are being shown of the forest fire in Portugal are not only a reminder of the dangers of fire, they are also powerful reminders of the dangers of the tongue. The words we use can, like fire, be deadly. They can hurt people and destroy lives. As a child I remember learning the rhyme “Sticks and stones may break my bones but words can never hurt me.” Whoever came up with this saying was an idiot! Careless and harmful words can cause wounds that hurt worse and last longer than those caused by sticks or stone. Most of us can bear witness to that.
James declares that “all kinds of animals, birds, reptiles and creatures of the sea are being tamed and have been tamed by man, but no man can tame the tongue. It is a restless evil, full of deadly poison.” (vs. 7-8) This is a sad commentary on our state but who could deny it is accurate? Perhaps we’ll never be able to fully tame the tongue but surely we can do better than we have. I certainly hope so. In so many arenas our language has become caustic and vitriolic. People get hurt every day.
Obviously I cannot control what others say but I do have some control over what I say. So do you. Let us, therefore, choose to speak words that encourage, help, comfort and heal, not words that hurt, discourage and tear down others. Long ago the Psalmist offered this prayer: “Set a guard over my mouth, O Lord; keep watch over the door of my lips. Let not my heart be drawn to what is evil.” (141:3-4) If we would be willing to offer this prayer at the beginning of each day, I can’t help but believe it would go a long way in eliminating a lot of needless and harmful words. Smokey the Bear used to say “Only you can prevent forest fires.” James would have us understand that same thing holds true for the verbal ones.
–Chuck
Comments Off on Taming the Tongue | tags: Book of James, fire, forest fire, James 3:5-6, James 3:7-8, Portugal, Psalm 141:3-4, Smokey the Bear, the tongue, wildfire, words | posted in Bible verses, Spirituality
Sep
23
2014
Recently I spent a little time in Maine. My mother as well as my sister and her family live in Brunswick, just north of Portland. Before heading back home to Southern California, Vicky (my wife) and I went to Acadia National Park. While this was not a photo trip, I did, of course, spend some time photographing both in the Brunswick area and in Acadia.
I sent a group of photos to Chuck. This is one of his favorite places. It was my favorite place while I was there – my favorite place is always the place where I can be out in nature spending some time being close to and connecting with God’s Creation. Connecting with nature, and God, means for me, being aware of the totality of nature from bugs to landscapes, and photographing it all. Chuck liked my pictures and said he was glad I got to photograph some “creepy crawlies.” Kidding, I said that we lovers of God’s Creation don’t call minibeasts “creepy crawlies.”
But this got me thinking. When Genesis says that God looked over his creation and said it was all good, I don’t think He said, “And those creepy crawlies are okay, too.” “Creepy crawlies” is a judgment of God’s Creation based on our prejudices, not God’s.
The poet Maya Angelou used to emphasize how much words matter. I think they do. What words we use to describe our world affects how we see it, and this definitely affects how we see nature. How often have deserts and wetlands, for example, been called “wastelands” or “worthless” as a justification for destroying them? Or how often do you hear about a desert being “restored” or “reclaimed” or “made useful”? I find it hard to believe God looks at His world with those descriptions. Once you spend some time in a desert, you discover what an amazing ecosystem it is with everything perfectly aligned to the environment. Just as it is. Without our help. Imagine that!
Proverbs 18:21 says “The tongue has the power of life and death, and those who love it will eat its fruit. (NIV)” I like the translation of this version by The Message, “Words kill, words give life; they’re either poison or fruit – you choose.” And of course there is Psalm 19:14, a verse memorized in so many Sunday School classes, “Let the words of my heart and the meditation of my heart be pleasing in your sight, O Lord, my Rock and my Redeemer.” Now I really can’t believe giving prejudicial names to any of God’s creation, from spiders to people, swamps to mountains, is something that would be pleasing in God’s view.

– Rob
The pictures you see here are, from the top, sunrise at Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park, a daddy-long-legs (also called a harvestman), a jumping spider, Death Valley, and a tussock moth caterpillar.
Comments Off on What’s In A Name? | tags: Acadia, Maine, names, Proverbs, Proverbs 18:21, Psalm 19:14, words | posted in Animals, Bible verses, Creation Care, Nature photography