Postings on Proverbs 12:13
“An evil man is ensnared by the
transgression of his lips,
But the righteous will escape from trouble”
(NASB)
The poem “Sticks
and stones” naively proclaims, “words will never hurt me.” Solomon disagrees, as this proverb is
about how our own mouths can hurt us, terribly.
Who? An evil man vs. a righteous man
What? Is ensnared vs. will escape from trouble
Where? Anywhere
When? Anytime
Why? Transgression vs. [righteousness]
How? The implication is both of their mouths are
what cause one being ensnared and the other escaping from trouble
Words? Evil, ensnared, transgression, righteous,
escape, trouble
Notice, it doesn’t
say the righteous man avoids trouble, but that when he’s in trouble his mouth
helps him escape (see Longman 275).
Notice, your
character comes out of your mouth – the lips of evil men transgress – or as
Jesus put it “The good person out of the good
treasure of his heart
produces good, and the evil person out of his evil treasure produces evil, for
out of the abundance of the heart
his mouth
speaks” (Luke 6:45)
and “But what comes out of the mouth
proceeds from the heart” (Matthew 15:18).
The metaphor of a
trap vividly expresses how “lethal speech [can] take a victim by surprise and…destroy
him before he can deliver himself” (Waltke 530).
When I was a kid,
my mom used to tell me “if you didn’t have a mouth you’d never get in trouble”
(oh, the irony that I’ve been getting paid to talk for over a decade now!).
There are so many
sins that come from our mouths, and I’m sure that when you read the words “sins
of your mouth” that one particular kind of sin comes to mind, whether it’s
lying or gossip or ridicule or disrespect or being combative or a number of
them or something else. So, what do you do?
First, know our
mouths reflect our hearts. They convey
what we really want, what we think we need.
So, what is it you wanted when you lied – a person’s respect? To protect your reputation? To advance yourself? Often people gossip to make themselves seem
stronger or better than they actually are – is that you? What’s behind your words? Why did you say what you said? Critical to know what’s driving your words?
Second, when you
know what’s driving you, you’ve likely found some lie you’re telling
yourself. How? When it comes to lying, the lie might be “Their
respect is more important than my character” or “than the truth” or “than what God
thinks.”
Third, if we
really dig deep here we may find an idol, a functional god that controls our thoughts and our actions more than the one True God, Jesus Christ,
does. We turn from our commitment to Him
as our Savior and Lord and believe / trust the lie of the idol who promises some form
of rescue from something bad if we’ll do what it says.
If you’re honest, your mouths show your desperate need for a Savior who spoke
perfectly, in every situation to every person for 30+ years. This Savior doesn’t promise He’ll just clean your
mouth up. He promises to trade the recording
of every word you’ve ever said with every word He said, His perfect, sinless, mouth-righteousness
becoming yours, and at the same time, He promises to take the punishment you
deserve for your sinful, imperfect, wretched recordings. Then, after that great exchange, He will begin the work of cleaning your
heart, which will automatically clean your mouth.
“Out of the mouth,
the heart speaks.” What does your mouth
say about your heart? What does your
mouth say about who you’re most committed to? Is your mouth setting traps for you – I know mine has and probably is! So, what are you going to do about it?
I hope that
helps! TII!!!
Labels: Bible Study, Christian Life, Jesus, Proverbs, The Human Heart