Robin
Lake Park, Georgia USA
Posts: 1,080
Joined: January 2002
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#48149
Sun Apr 15, 2012 5:35 AM
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Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 52
Journeyman
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OP
Journeyman
Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 52 |
“A holy man used to say when he returned home from a night of table-talk that he would never accept such an invitation again, so remorseful did such nights always leave him; so impossible did he find it for him to hold his peace, and to speak only at the right moment, and only in the right way. And, without his holiness, I have often had his remorse, and so, I am quite sure, have many of you. There is no table we sit at very long that we do not more or less ruin either to ourselves or to some one else. We either talk too much, and thus weary and disgust people; or they weary and disgust us. We start ill-considered, unwise…topics. We blurt out our rude minds in rude words. We push aside our neighbor’s opinion, as if both he and his opinion were worthless, and we thrust forward our own as if wisdom would die with us. We do not put ourselves into our neighbor’s place. We have no imagination in conversation, and no humility, and no love. We lay down the law, and we instruct people who could buy us in one end of the market and sell us in the other if they thought us worth the trouble. It is easy to say grace; it is easy to eat and drink in moderation and with decorum and refinement; but it is our tongue that so ensnares us. For some men to command their tongue; to bridle, and guide, and moderate, and make just the right use of their tongue, is a conquest in religion, and in morals, and in good manners, that not one in a thousand of us has yet made over ourselves.” And, fact is, the damage we have far too often done with our words is too often never repaired. We can’t repair it, either because we don’t even know that damage was done or because the wound we caused was too great and hurts too much, or because the opportunity to repent and restore either never appeared or was missed when it did. Someone’s reputation was harmed by the words we spoke and sometimes harmed in the minds of people who neither know the person nor will ever meet him. Gossip we spread is then spread by others still farther and wider and no one can collect all the ill-reports even if he wished to do so. Our words have spread dissension and then the division between others takes on a life of its own and can’t be undone."
Alexander Whyte, [Walk, Character, and Conversation of our Lord], 244-246
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Joined: Apr 2001
Posts: 15,048 Likes: 286
Head Honcho
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Head Honcho
Joined: Apr 2001
Posts: 15,048 Likes: 286 |
One of the best sermons I have ever had the privilege of being privy to was preached by G. VanReenen here concerning The Ninth Commandment. ![[Linked Image]](http://the-highway.com/Smileys/enjoy.gif)
simul iustus et peccator
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 1,080 Likes: 16
ExCharisma
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ExCharisma
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 1,080 Likes: 16 |
False witness includes a lot of what passes for the gospel today! Made palatable for sinners so that they would want to accept it, rather than terrifying them for the justice of the righteous God which they face, whose unchangeable nature requires that sin be punished, so that they cry out for the mercy which God has provided in Christ's work. I suspect that many who have accepted today's soft, sugar-coated, sensible appeal to sinners will be as surprised as Tetzel's customers on the Last Day.
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Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 3,467 Likes: 72
Annie Oakley
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Annie Oakley
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 3,467 Likes: 72 |
The Chestnut Mare
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