By Allen White
The crucible for silver and the furnace for gold,
but the LORD tests
the heart.
A wicked person listens to deceitful lips;
a liar pays
attention to a destructive tongue.
Whoever mocks the
poor shows contempt for their Maker; whoever gloats over disaster will not go
unpunished. Proverbs 17:3-5
Hebrew poetry uses parallels to add emphasis. When we look
at the second proverb here, we see this technique. A wicked person is the same
as a liar. This person “listens to deceitful lips” and “pays attention to a
destructive tongue.” It’s quite an indictment.
Why would anyone accept a lie? These proverbs don’t focus on
the speaker as much as the listener. The listener is wicked, but then, the
listener is also a liar. The sense is there is sort of a mutual admiration
society among those who reinvent the truth. The error is not only in lying, but
in accepting lies as well.
Wouldn’t truth telling and listening to the truth be easier?
The great thing about telling the truth is that you don’t have to remember what
you said. Liars must add lies to cover their lies. It’s very convoluted.
But, why lie and listen to lies? Most of us want the
assurance that we’re okay. Insecure people need affirmation that their
decisions are okay. Deceptive people need others to side with them in order to
feel “right.” I won’t delve into all of the layers of this neurosis, but if
you’ve experienced someone like this, you know exactly what I’m talking about.
These folks live in an unreal world – a house of cards built on lie after lie.
The truth is too hard to take.
So, what do you do if a deceitful person is telling lies
about you or a deceived person is accepting those lies? You really can’t do
anything. But, fortunately, the proverb about liars doesn’t stand alone.
The first proverb says that “the Lord tests the heart.” God
knows what’s in our hearts. If our hearts show contempt for the less fortunate
or gloat after disaster, God’s punishment will follow. If our hearts are pure, then
we will see God (Matthew 5:8). But, who actually has a completely pure heart?
[LINK: http://galatians419.blogspot.com/2010/11/forgiving-ourselves-our-pride-versus.html]
God is truth. There is no deceit in Him at all. The lies and
deception in this world will be exposed exactly for what they are. Things that
are done in secret will be shouted from the rooftops (Luke 12:2-3; Romans 2:16).
So, what do you do when God is for you, but others wish to
do you in? You trust God. You have absolutely no control over what other people
do or what other people say. None. But, you do have control of yourself. When
you try to control other people, you lose control of yourself.
You and I are safely in God’s hand. Regardless of the storm
that rages around us, our responsibility is
to live in obedience to God. No
matter how we feel. No matter what other people are doing. No matter how they
do us wrong. What matters, what we can control, is how we conduct ourselves.
The Bible tells us to “bless those who curse you, pray for
those who mistreat you” (Luke 6:28). That may seem like the last thing that we
want to do. But, it’s the right thing.
Who is working against you these days? Are you praying for
them? They are definitely in need of prayer. Are you doing the right things
even when you’ve been done wrong? With God’s help, you are better than how
you’re being treated.
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