The Berean Expositor
Volume 15 - Page 83 of 160
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the testimony of Mark 3: 5, and all the passages where orge is translated "wrath" when
used of God. Nevertheless it is true wisdom to shun anger, to class it with bitterness and
wrath and clamour and blasphemy and malice (Eph. 4: 31), for it requires a perfect and
sinless being to be angry and sin not. If anger is ever entertained let us hasten to finish
with it; let not the sun go down before the difference is settled. Plutarch tells us it was a
maxim among the Pythagoreans, that whenever one had given way to anger, the
difference was made up before sunset. Would that this same spirit were more common
among the Lord's people.
Not only may truth be expressed in words, it must come out in deeds. Stealing is the
lie in practice. This in all its shapes and forms must be put away. In its place let there be
labour, working with the hands that which is good. This labour is with the object:--
"That he may HAVE, TO GIVE" (Eph. 4: 28).
Labour merely that one may have may be selfishness, and industry of itself may not
express "the truth", but labour that one may have something to give is an entire reversal
of the lie, that steals from another, and is a manifestation of the truth.
The devil, and the Spirit of God.
Closely associated with the lie is the devil, and with the truth the Holy Spirit of God.
It must be kept well in memory that to fail to put off the lie and to put on the new man
may "give place to the devil", and when this takes place we may be sure that there is also
another equally sad result, viz., the grieving of the Holy Spirit of God whereby we are
sealed unto the day of redemption.
Among the many ways whereby truth may be hindered and a place given to the devil
is revealed in such a strange word as "clamour". That man who when he gives a
command must "shout", who when he argues a point of truth must "raise his voice" does
not give an outward expression of that lowliness and meekness which commends the
truth.
"Evil speaking" is in the original "blasphemy", and is probably derived from blaptein
ten phemen = "Blasting the reputation or credit" of any one. We may sincerely believe
that to take a "text" from Shakespeare or the Poets is to belittle the Scriptures, but we
sometimes wonder whether Tennyson's Knights of King Arthur, who vowed "to speak no
slander, nor listen to it" do not put many a believer to shame. "Love thinketh no evil."
Be ye imitators of God.
The remedy for this and all kindred manifestations of the flesh is found in the next
three verses:--
"Be ye kind . . . . . Be ye imitators of God" (Eph. 4: 32, 5: 1).
This after all is but a homely way of expressing the more doctrinal passage:--