Friday, May 8, 2020

Kind, tenderhearted--or else?

This morning in the news, U.N. Chief Antonio Guterres called on the world community to "take bolder actions" against "hate speech". In a video statement, he asked “everyone, everywhere, to stand up against hate, treat each other with dignity, and take every opportunity to spread kindness.”

He called on social media companies in particular to step up and take more aggressive action to “remove racist, misogynist, and other harmful content."
Guterres said, “COVID-19 does not care who we are, where we live, what we believe, or about any other distinction. We need every ounce of solidarity to tackle it together.”

*****

Proverbs 16: 23-24 says, [23] The heart of the wise teacheth his mouth, and addeth learning to his lips.
[24] Pleasant words are as an honeycomb, sweet to the soul, and health to the bones.

“Unless the Spirit has led us to acquaint ourselves with what the Word of God says about our speech, we can hardly imagine the important place it has in the lives of both the saved and the unsaved,” writes Bible expositor Cora MacIlravey (circa 1916).

“If we could hear all our words that are spoken during even one day, and as they echo back upon us, if we would remember that ‘out of the fullness of the heart the mouth speaketh,’ we should know, as we have never known, what is in our hearts.

“…There is no place in our lives where the proof of God’s inward working is so wonderfully illustrated as in the relation between the heart and the speech. As the Holy Spirit works in our hearts, staying our thoughts and desires upon God, our words become as the over-filled cells in the honeycomb. They are ladened with the rich, unadulterated milk of the Word.

“…In the nineteenth Psalm we are told that the Word of God is ‘sweeter also than honey and the honeycomb.’ The droppings of the honeycomb is the purest honey; and there is a thought also that the comb is filled to overflowing so that drops of pure honey hang from it; not continually dropping, but hanging there ready to drop at the proper time. Not only is the pure sweetness of honey under our tongue, but milk is found there, too.

“…The honey is sweet, nourishing and soothing; the milk represents nourishment and edification. It is as we discern and feed upon the sincere milk of the Word, that the Word is stored away in our hearts and is found under our tongues. The bride’s words are not like the restless waves of shallow water, which roar and foam over the stones and rocks that lie so near the surface, that there is hardly depth to wet one’s feet. Under the bride’s tongue are words of comfort and sweetness, words of grace seasoned with salt, words that are good for edifying as the need may be, words that give grace to them that hear.”

The hymn “I love Thee, Jesus” includes the lyrics:
Thy love, Lord Jesus,
Is sweeter than wine,
And Thy fragrance of ointments
  My heart doth entwine,
And Thy fragrance of ointments
  My heart doth entwine.
    A fount in gardens,
    A well of living waters,
    Which streams and flows from Lebanon’s mountains.
O come Beloved,
On my garden blow,
That the odor of spices
  May break forth and flow,
That the odor of spices
  May break forth and flow.
    My spouse, My sister,
    I’m come into My garden
    To feast upon wine, milk and honey.

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