Note:
It is this simple: if you know anyone who has “a gossip problem” and they are your
friends on social media (Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, Instagram, Google+ and
Snapchat), just pick up the link to this post and share it often until you are
aware that they have read it. Then wash your hands off it and move on.
Gossip |
*******
I have seen it.
I have heard it too.
A guy or a lady comes to me as a leader and as a friend,
and the talk that follows is about how discouraged they are because a grown up (and
mostly married) “Christian” woman said very nasty stuff about him/her. And they
feel bad. Really bad. They feel so bad that they are more inclined to hit and
hate the gossip, face her head-on and tell her to go to hell than to love her. But they’re holding their guts
about it. (Oh, thank God for that thing called grace.) The victim of the gossip
now tells me that they now feel like he/she wants to leave the church/team and
go elsewhere or quit ministry altogether; and maybe add a few footnotes to their
distress and observations: to call us all Christians in that place/team a bunch
of hypocrites. Justified, eh?
Normally, I look at them and tell them that I get it. All
this is messed up. Because when you think of grown up women – who supposedly
should be practicing Christians, carriers of their own crosses and removers of
their own specks in their swollen eyes - wagging their tongues in the name of
talking about everyone else and with bad intentions, it is not good. It is
messy. Then, to make it worse, these same women expect these young ladies to
trust them with their private life details: about work, about relationships,
about life etc. etc. That makes it even more complicated. I always wonder why
they choose not to do the following: call the concerned party, request
audience, and address the issue or request for clarification. Is that so hard?
Really?
So the victim and I remain seated, me
convincing them to stick in there and pray for an upgrade of “shock-absorbers”
from God, and they convincing me that they just hate how grown-up women (supposedly
confessors of the work of the cross of Calvary) behave. They even quote 1Thessalonians 4:11
on me (…and to
aspire to live quietly, and to mind your own affairs, and to work with your
hands, as we instructed you…) which I always agree
with.
I know most gossips think: “Aaah, talk is just talk. It will pass.” But words are powerful. Words
are more powerful than a two-edged sword. (Yes please, quote me some Hebrews 4:12, won’t you?) They cut deeper, they erode
wider and they disintegrate mercilessly. Words created the world, and they can
as well destroy it (James 3:1-12.)
Never take the effect of words – whether good or bad - on
people and situations lightly.
So, after sitting down with quite a number of young people who
have been affected by gossip, here is how I have found words used in gossip are
such a dangerous thing:
- Gossip breaks the very law that is at the center of Christianity: love your neighbor as you love yourself. Would you like someone to talk bad unverified stuff about you (or those you love) behind your back or to tell people things about you (or those you love) that were to be kept secret and hidden from everyone else? You don’t, right? Then stop gossiping.
- It makes Christians who are gossips equal to the devil: slanderers and accusers of brethren. Slandering and falsely accusing Christians is the work of the devil: Revelation 12:10 “And I heard a loud voice in heaven, saying, ‘Now the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God and the authority of his Christ have come, for the accuser of our brothers has been thrown down, who accuses them day and night before our God.’” Stop taking the devil’s job description for yourself. You’ll end up in hell!
- It breaks fellowship because people just can’t trust one another. If you read my article on why people really leave teams, gossip is right there in the middle. Christians should be carriers of each other burdens, a people who pray for one another in love, a people who trust in God together for the sake of others, not those who add more weight on others through bad-mouthing. Come on, our own crosses were already heavy enough and we have discarded them at Calvary in order to carry lighter ones. Quote me some verses here too… Note that a leader who is a gossip is a fool (Proverbs 10:18) and that it hinders the passing on of information between two parties that should otherwise agree.
- Jesus sees gossips in the light of this verse: Matthew 18:6 “…but whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened around his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea.” (These are Jesus’ own words.) They are causing other brethren to sin: to hate, to fall out of love, to walk away from fellowships and to stop serving their God. So yeah, it seems like tying a millstone around the neck and throwing them into the sea is not such a bad idea (Jesus’ idea, not mine.)
And here are verses that say that gossip is terribly sinful
(see the bold and underline in each verse):
Romans 1:28-30 (ESV) “And since they did not see fit to
acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be
done. They
were filled with all manner of unrighteousness, evil, covetousness, malice.
They are full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, maliciousness. They are gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient
to parents…”
2 Corinthians 12:20 (ESV) “For I fear that perhaps when I come I
may find you not as I wish, and that you may find me not as you wish - that perhaps there may be quarreling,
jealousy, anger, hostility, slander,
gossip, conceit, and disorder.”
1Timothy 5:13 (ESV) “Besides that, they learn to be idlers,
going about from house to house, and not only idlers, but also gossips and busybodies, saying
what they should not.”
End note:
If
you are going to talk about someone else to another person, let it be with the
intention of offering help (prayer, counsel, love, material help etc.) but not
spreading malice. If you need help on how to stop gossiping, the help I offered
in this post on masturbation applies to you too. And to all those who have been affected
by gossip in one way or another, pray that I’ll do a post in the near future
titled: So They’ve Gossiped About You, What Next? to help you deal with
the aftermath of gossip.
God
bless.
Bonface Morris.
No comments:
Post a Comment