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Amen. Well we're turning to James
chapter 3. We're in the book of James once
again and we're reading a number just verses here. We'll read
from the verse 8. Just a number of verses tonight
and then we'll get down to prayer after I preach the word of God. So James chapter 3 and the verse
8. Tells us here, but the tongue
can no man tame. It is an unruly evil, full of
deadly poison. Therewith bless we God, even
the Father, and therewith curse we men, which are made after
the similitude of God. Out of the same mouth proceedeth
blessing and cursing. my brethren these things ought
not so to be doth a fountain send forth at the same place
sweet water and bitter can the fig tree my brethren bear olive
berries either a vine figs so can no fountain both yield salt
water and fresh amen we'll end the reading at the verse 12 let's
pray father in heaven now help us we need thee we depend on
thee fill me with thy spirit and power for i pray this in
jesus holy name amen Well, folks, there's no let up from James
when it comes to dealing with the issue of the tongue. And tonight brings us to consider
a number of other verses in which James becomes more specific as
he deals with this issue of the tongue. Having spoken generally
about the tongue in the previous verses, James now comes to focus
on one specific kind of tongue, that being a hypocritical tongue
a hypocritical tongue and he presents that word that tongue
in the words of the verse number nine and ten of james chapter
three therewith speaking of the tongue bless we god even the
father and therewith curse we men which are made after the
similitude of god out of the same mouth proceeded blessing
and cursing my brethren these things ought not so to be now
here what we have presented by the Apostle James is what is
known in English terms as a dichotomy. A dichotomy is a difference between
two completely opposite ideas or things. I suppose an example
wouldn't go amiss to explain what is meant by a dichotomy. In the Tale of Two Cities, that
book by Charles Dickens, tells the story of two cities during
the French Revolution, the city of London and the city of Paris. These two settings create an
initial clear dichotomy that is added on to as the places
are compared and contrasted. Let me quote the opening lines
of that book. It was the best of times, It
was the worst of times. There's two opposing ideas. The
best of times, but at the same time, it was the worst of times.
It was the age of wisdom. It was the age of foolishness.
It was a season of light. It was a season of darkness.
It was a spring of hope, and it was the winter of despair. Contrasting ideas at the same
time are contrasting things in two different cities. Well James
here presents what is known as a dichotomy in the verses 9 and
10. He speaks of one tongue and that
tongue on one hand blesses God and on the other hand it's found
cursing men. Now such happens in our world
today. I know that some of you are football
fans and so you know what the FA Cup is the Football Association
Cup, the FA Cup as it's known, is the annual knockout competition
there in the English domestic league. It was first played in
1871, 1872 season, and is the oldest national competition in
the world. Now there are many traditions
that are connected with FA Cup final day, that competition that
really brings down the English premiership season. One such
FA Cup tradition is the singing of Abide With Me just before
the teams emerge from their changing rooms and out of the tunnel there
at Wembley Stadium. It was Henry Francis Light who
wrote the hymn and published it in the early 1900s. It was
first sung at the 1927 FA Cup, and has ever been present since
that particular FA Cup final. 90,000 people pack into the Wembley
Stadium, and they take the words of Abide With Me upon their tongues
before their teams come out of the tunnel. These are the words
they sing. Hold thou thy cross before my
closing eyes. Shine through the gloom and point
me to the skies, heavens, morning breaks, and earth's vain shadows
flee. In life, in death, O Lord, abide
with me. And yet within minutes of the
starting whistle and the first decision going against their
team, the same tongues that were employed singing about the cross
are now filled with oaths and curses. Here we have an example
of what James is speaking of here. Out of the same mouth,
blessing God and cursing men. But we're not to look at the
ungodly. James does not cause us to focus
on the ungodly's tongue, because this can happen in the life of
the believer. He's speaking here to the brethren,
to those who belong to the household of faith. Look there at the end
of the verse number 10. My brethren, having spoken about
out of the same mouth proceeded blessing and cursing, my brethren,
These things ought not so to be. And we can find ourselves
as Christians guilty of doing the very thing that we find unacceptable
when it comes to the ungodly. Let me give you an example, or
a number of examples, of how this double-tongueness, and that
isn't an English word, so don't be using it in English, but it
is a word at least in my mind, double-tongueness, how this can
happen in our own lives as Christians. We come to church, We sing God's
praise. We maybe even say a hearty amen
now and again to what is being preached. And let me say, I like
a hearty amen now and again as I preach. But then we get into
the car. To go home, the children misbehave in the back seat, or
we get to the mini roundabout at the head of Portland Owen,
and nobody knows how to use it. No matter how long it's been
there, no one seems to know how to use it. And the language that
we employ in such circumstance is a little more choice than
we would expect from someone who has just left the house of
God. Or we come to the prayer meeting.
We employ our tongues to sing God's praise and to supplicate
and intercede on behalf of ourselves and on behalf of others, only
to find ourselves on the way home criticizing some Christian
because they didn't look at us the right way, or they didn't
acknowledge us, or we complain about the length of the sermon,
or the length of somebody's prayer. Or maybe how warm it was or how
cold it was in the house of God. My brethren, these things ought
not so to be. Very plain and simple. Now, in
the first place, let me say that to use our tongues to bless God
is a most suitable and most proper employment for these tongues
of ours. It is a most suitable and a most
proper employment for our tongues. It's the God who saved us. Is the God who justified us?
Is the God who adopts us? Is the God who sustains us? Is
the God who provides for us? Is it the God who keeps us? Is the God who comforts us? The
God who shields us? The God who guides us? The God
who empowers us? The God who sanctifies us? The
God who will someday bring us to heaven and glorify us? Is he not worthy of the tongue's
praise? Well, of course he is. For this
is what the word bless means. It literally translates to mean
to bless or to speak well of. to speak well of. And this is
what we're to do with our tongues, brethren and sisters. We're to
speak well of our God. And surely there's many a thing
in your life, many a thing in your life's experience where
God has helped and guided and sustained and brought you through
and you could speak well of God. You could praise God for, you
could use your tongue tonight as we come to the place of prayer.
and we could offer the sacrifice of praise. Whoso offereth praise
glorifyeth me. And so as we come to pray, brethren
and sister, tonight, with all the trying circumstances that
we find ourselves in and all the difficulties that we have
in our families and in our lives and in the nation as a whole,
yet let's praise God, let's bless God, let's thank God for what
He has done, that He has lifted us that He's rescued us, that
He's illuminated our minds and regenerated our hearts and brought
us into the family of God, brought us under the faithful preaching
of the Word of God, given us homes and families and health
and strength. The list is endless. The list
is endless. Brethren and sisters, we shouldn't
have time to curse men. We shouldn't have time to complain. We shouldn't have time to murmur. We shouldn't have time to criticize,
because we should be blessing the Lord. I wonder, have you
come, is that your attitude tonight? Have you come to bless the Lord?
Have you come to praise the Lord? Have you come to speak well of
your God tonight, even in the place of prayer? The blessing
of God, the praising of God, is the great end. Think of this. It is the great end for which
the human tongue was even created. That's why it exists. This tongue of ours This and
this alone is the highest employment that then the tongue can ever
be engaged in. When we consider what God has
done for us, when we consider what God is doing for us, when
we consider what God is yet to do for us, then we would wholeheartedly
have to agree with the sentiments of Charles Wesley when he wrote
the words, oh, for a thousand tongues to sing. my great Redeemer's
praise, the glories of my God and King that triumphs off his
grace. John Blanchard tells the story of a friend who told them
that the most challenging message he ever heard was called 10 minutes
after the benediction. 10 minutes after the benediction. The sermon spoke of those who
moved in moments from the gloria to gossip, from creed to criticism,
from worshiping God to wounding man in a moment of time. That's the kind of hypocritical
tongue that James is calling out here. He's calling it out.
These things ought not to be. He's very plain, simple preacher. They shouldn't be taking place. Full stop, no excuse, no reason. They shouldn't be taking place.
If you are one of the brethren, if you belong to the household
of faith, now if the blessing of God with our tongues is the
proper use of our tongues, then cursing men with our tongues
must then be seen as the improper use of the tongue. James gives
us a compelling argument why we should refrain from cursing
others. The reason he gives is because
human beings are made after the similitude. The word is simply
likeness. They are made after the likeness
of God. The thought that man is made
after the image of God should therefore restrain our tongue,
for in cursing others, God himself is being wronged. Did you ever
think of that? God himself is being wronged
by the injury done to his image that is within the person that
you are cursing, criticizing against. The sad and harsh reality
is that many a person speaks with perfect courtesy to strangers
in love and gentleness, and yet snaps with ungracious and impatient
anger at family members. There are people that you meet,
and they speak sweet. They're sweet. They're sweet
at the religious meeting. And then they go outside and
they murder someone's reputation with a malicious gossiping tongue.
My reverend, these things ought not so to be. The Bible commentator
Matthew Henry, he said, for men to reproach those who have not
only the image of God in their natural faculties, but are renewed
after the image of God by the grace of the gospel, this is
a most shameful contradiction. to all their pretensions of honoring
God. Now to highlight the ludicrous
situation of a tongue uttering blessings one minute and a little
while later uttering curses, James appeals to two illustrations
from nature to show that such a state of affairs is not compatible
with logic. It's not reasonable. Doesn't
make any sense. And so he speaks and he brings
two illustrations, the verse 11 and the verse 12. Doth a fountain
send forth the same place, sweet water and bitter? Can the fig
tree, my brethren, bear all of berries, neither a vine figs? So can no fountain both yield
salt water and bitter. Fresh two illustrations the first
one concerning a fountain He asked the question doth a fountain
send forth at the same place sweet water and better now the
term sweet could be also Translated fresh the term better brackish
we would call salt and water and that's how it's translated
in the next verse the verse 12 can so can no find in both yield
salt water and fresh and so james asks a rhetorical question does
it make sense is it logical to you he's saying that the fountain
can send forth salt water and at the same time from the same
fountain head it sends forth fresh water? Is that logical
to you? Well, of course it isn't. It
either yields salt water or it yields fresh water. It cannot. It cannot yield both kinds of
water. And with them coming to that
conclusion, James then leaves them to join the dots. He doesn't apply what he's speaking. He hopes that he's speaking in
simple enough terms that they, in and of themselves, they're
able to join the dots and bring the application to their own
hearts, just as it is unnatural for a fountain to send forth
two kinds of waters from its fountainhead, so it is unnatural
for a tongue to bless God and to curse men at the same time. It's either one or the other. If it's true, if it's true that
a fountainhead emits brackish or salty water one moment and
then fresh water the next, then we must conclude that there's
something happening at the fountainhead. The fountainhead, there's where
the source of the problem is. There must be something wrong
with the fountainhead. If there's salt and then there's
fresh water, and so it is with the tongue. When the tongue one
day is blessing God and the next day it's cursing men, this points
to the problem or a problem in the heart. The heart, there's
the problem. It's not the tongue. Rather,
Christ said, And so it's not the tongue initially, primarily
the cause. It is the heart of man. I suppose if we were writing
this portion of God's Word, we would use the example of a tap. You know, you turn on the tap,
you're not going to get fresh water and salt water at the same
time. It's one or the other. It's the
same kind of idea. If there's something wrong with
the water, there's something wrong with the source, the fountainhead. And it's the problem of the heart. Now, we do find an example. of
this very thing, this blessing God and cursing man. We do find
it happening in the life of a child of God. That person's name is
Peter. You'll all recall how Peter said
in Matthew 16, verse 16, concerning the Lord Jesus Christ, he says,
thou art the Christ, the son of the living God. However, the
night when Christ went on trial, Matthew 26 verse 74, when Peter
was challenged on that occasion with his association with Jesus
Christ, we read there in Matthew 26 verse 27, that he began to
curse, to swear, saying, I know not the man. What had happened? Well, the language Peter used
that night evidenced a far deeper problem, a problem of the heart. His heart had grown cold. His heart had departed from God. I wonder, does your double speech,
does it evidence that a departure has taken place in your life? with regard to your relationship
with the Lord Jesus Christ. You know what to say in church,
but take yourself out into the world, in a place of employment,
and the language just isn't what one would expect of a believer.
It may be that the heart is far from God. A departure has taken
place. How often has our speech not
bereath or accused us, as the little girl said to Peter, thy
speech doth berevi, betrays you. You're a Galilean. Such double
speech should cause alarm bells to ring in our minds and our
hearts. and to bring us to examine ourselves in order that we might
pinpoint where and when the departure from God has taken place. And
then the second illustration, it's the same almost as the first. It's of a fig tree. The question
is asked, can the fig tree, my brethren, bear olive berries,
either of vine figs? Now, of course, the reply is,
of course not. If the tree is a fig tree, it
will bear figs. If it is a vine, it's going to
bear the fruit of the vine. Sure, anyone with any bit of
wit between their two ears, any bit of sense would understand
that that is the case. You see, the nature of the tree
determines the fruit that it's going to bear. And Jesus Christ
said something similar to this. and over there in Luke chapter
6 verse 43 to 45 let me read the words Jesus said for a good
tree bringeth not forth corrupt fruit neither does a corrupt
tree bring forth good fruit for every tree is known by his own
fruit For of thorns men do not gather figs, nor of bramble bush
gather they grapes. A good man out of the good treasure
of his heart bringeth forth that which is good, and an evil man
out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which
is evil, for out for for off the abundance of the heart his
mouth speaketh." And really what James is simply doing, he's simply
reminding his readership of the teachings of Jesus Christ. And
that's what any good preacher should do. should simply point
his hearers back to the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ and
of his apostles and those men inspired of God in both incidences. There in Luke 6 and here in James
chapter 3, the truth presented is the same. The type of fruit
produced by the tree is determined by the species of the tree, and
the application is simple. The type of fruit from one's
mouth is determined by the condition of the heart. Therefore, the
good fruit of blessing God that James speaks of comes from a
heart that has been regenerated, a heart that has been changed,
and the heart that curses man is a heart that is unregenerate. Now here's the application. fruit
that you and I bear is determined by our nature. So then, is it
a sin nature or is it the divine nature that controls what comes
out of your mouth? A sin nature or the divine nature? If you want to determine which
of the natures it is, just look at how you used your tongue in
the past seven days. That will be a good gauge, a
good indicator of where you are with God, if you are with God
at all. The tongue is but a window off
the heart. And therefore, if your words
are bitter, it's only because your heart has become poisoned
by bitterness. If your words are proud, it's
only because your heart has been overtaken with pride. If your
words are angry, it's because your heart has been infected
by anger. If your heart is, or your tongue
is, or your words are critical, it is only because you've become
possessed with a spirit of criticism, a corrupt unholy heart. eventually will be exposed by
corrupt and unholy speech. If the tongue is not tamed by
God, if it is not restrained by God, if it is not controlled
by God, then it is a sure indicator that the heart isn't either.
If lip and life do not correlate, if they don't correspond, then
there needs to be an examination of the heart because that's where
the real problem lies. Now, since the heart is the problem,
and since the heart is the source of the problem, then remedying
the heart will lead to a remedying of the tongue. And only God can
do a heart work. Only God. Only God can cleanse
the heart. Only God can regenerate the heart.
Only God can renew the heart and thereby transform the tongue
of the Christian that has fallen into a deplorable state. God did it in the life of Peter.
Here's a man who cursed and swore with oaths and curses. And yet
that same tongue was brought to the cross. And thank God that
same tongue was used on the day of Pentecost along with the other
apostles that saw 3,000 souls added to the church of Jesus
Christ. Don't tell me that God can't change your tongue. Don't
tell me that God can't change your nature, that he cannot change
your heart. What he did for Peter, thank
God, he can do for you. And so what are you to do? You
bring your tongue to the cross. You bring the tongue to the cross.
You have it crucified and cleansed, the blood applied, and thank
God then sanctified by the Spirit of God. With this illustration,
I close tonight. A Greek philosopher asked his
servant to provide the best dish possible for him to eat. The
servant prepared a dish of tongue. The philosopher was taken a little
back and the servant was asked to explain why he had brought
a dish of tongue. The servant replied, it is best
because with it we may bless and communicate happiness, dispel
sorrow, remove despair, cheer the faint-hearted, inspire the
discouraged, and say a hundred other things to uplift mankind. Later on in the day, the same
philosopher asked the same servant to provide the worst dish that
he thought that the man could eat. A dish of tongue appeared
on the table again. The philosopher was bemused and
asked the servant to explain himself. This was the best dish. Now you bring it again as the
worst dish. Explain yourself. The servant
said, it is the worst because with it we may curse and break
human hearts, destroy reputations, promote discord and strife. set
families, communities, and nations at war with each other. You would have to agree with
me, the philosopher's servant was a very wise servant indeed,
because he saw the blessing that the tongue could be, but he also
saw the curse and the damage and the hurt that it could be. So how will we use our tongues
Will we use them to bless God? Will we use them to curse men? May God help us to use our tongues
wisely by promoting the gospel and by praising our God. May God challenge all of our
hearts through his word this evening for his name's sake.
Amen. Let's bow our heads in prayer.
O God, our Father, we commit the time around thy word to thee. We pray that the challenge will
come as the spirit applies the word to our hearts, not to someone
else, but to our own lives. O God, may we never fall into
this contradictory state of life where we bless God and we curse
man. with these tongues of ours, O
God, such should send that emergency warning into our lives that the
heart is not right with God. Therefore, give us grace to receive
from thee thy word to our hearts tonight. We offer prayer in our
Savior's precious name.
The tongue- Part 3
Series Studies in James
| Sermon ID | 31821756565016 |
| Duration | 32:03 |
| Date | |
| Category | Prayer Meeting |
| Bible Text | James 3:9-12 |
| Language | English |
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