I never thought Iād see the day when Christians would justify swearing
I lived a sheltered life growing up. My Christian parents allowed me to watch a re-release of Gone With the Wind at the local theater when I was 12, and my virgin ears were scandalized when Rhett Butler told Scarlett, āFrankly, my dear, I donāt give a damn.ā I had never heard such language—and I knew that if I ever talked like Rhett Butler in my house, I would get a Southern-style whipping.
Fast-forward to today, when profanity has so saturated our culture that dirty words are unavoidable. Dropping the F-bomb is a daily habit for millions of Americans. Jesse Sheidlower, the editor-at-large of the Oxford English Dictionary, says the F-word has lost its shock value. He says, āFor most people, itās hardly noticeable anymore.ā
Today students wear āWTF?ā T-shirts to school. Iāve seen the F-word indelibly tattooed on peopleās arms in dark ink. Iāve heard guys and girls alike use the F-word more than 15 times in a sentence to simply describe their day. Thereās even a mock childrenās book titled Go the F— to Sleep that was one of the fastest-selling titles on Amazon in 2011. Whatās going on here?
Music has certainly played a role in forcing the F-word on us. (Listen, if you dare, to any popular hip-hop artist for proof of this nastiness.) One song by the rock band Limp Bizkit a few years ago featured the F-word 50 times. American rapper CeeLo Green released a song in 2010 called āF— You,ā and it was nominated for a Grammy Award. Meanwhile, the Motion Picture Association of America recently relaxed its ratings code to allow more uses of the F-word in PG-13 movies. (The old rule only allowed one F-bomb per film.)
Iām not going on a crusade to wash out our nationās potty mouth. We live in a free country. And besides, I donāt expect non-Christians to talk like Sunday school teachers. But at the risk of sounding like a prude, I think true believers need to be reminded that itās not OK to talk trash. This certainly goes for preachers—no matter how young and trendy they are.
I honestly never thought Iād see the day when Christians would justify swearing. But it was only inevitable, since many popular preachers have emphasized greasy grace while overlooking our serious lack of discipleship. The underlying message these days is: āDonāt be religious or legalistic. We have to be relevant to the culture.ā
The implied meaning is: āGo ahead and talk dirty. God doesnāt care. Maybe when non-Christians hear you swearing, they wonāt label you a religious nut.ā Iām not buying that line for three reasons:
1) Filthy talk defiles you and those around you. Jesus said it is not what goes into the mouth of a person that defiles him, but what comes out of his mouth (Matt. 15:11). Then the apostle Paul wrote, āLet no corrupting talk come out of your mouthsā (Eph. 4:29, ESV). The word corrupting here refers to rotten fruit or rancid fish. Filthy talk stinks! Dirty words have the power to soil you—and the rancid odor will linger in your soul.
2) Obscene or crude language is a reflection of your inner character. British preacher Charles Spurgeon once said, āBeware of everyone who swears: He who would blaspheme his Maker would make no bones of lying or stealing.ā
Ephesians 5:4 says filthy talk or crude joking are not ābefittingā a Christian (ASV). The NIV translates it this way: āNor should there be obscenity, foolish talk or coarse joking, which are out of place.ā If a Christian defiantly insists on talking trash, he has revealed deeper flaws and canāt be trusted.
3) Rough language is a sign of an unsurrendered will. The psalmist wrote, āSet a guard, O Lord, over my mouth; keep watch over the door of my lips!ā (Ps. 141:3, ESV). Mature Christians invite the Holy Spirit to inspect every area of their lives: attitudes, thoughts, grudges and addictions—as well as coarse language. If you insist on holding on to carnal habits, you are quenching the Spiritās fire and limiting the flow of His anointing in your life.
The prophet Isaiah recognized that he was āa man of unclean lipsā who lived among āa people of unclean lipsā (Is. 6:5). After his repentance, an angel touched his lips with the hot coal of Godās holiness.
We need this miracle today if we want to speak for God. He wants to use our mouths as channels of His life and blessing, but we will never be His prophets if we talk like the world. Let the Holy Spirit clean up your conversation.
J. Lee Grady was editor of Charisma for 11 years. He now serves as contributing editor while devoting more time to ministry. You can find him on Twitter at @leegrady or online at themordecaiproject.org. His newest book is Fearless Daughters of the Bible.