Lord,
who may dwell in your sanctuary?. . . [He] who keeps his [promise] even when it
hurts. (Psalm
15:4)
Ever
heard one of these? Hey, I was just going
to call you! Or, I’ll feed it and
take care of it – you’ll never even know we have a dog! Or, We’ll play catch tomorrow. Or, No, that dress doesn’t make you look fat. Or, We’ll do lunch.
Would
you believe it if someone said any of these things to you? Have you ever made
one of these promises and not really meant it? Paul wrote: I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do I do not do, but
what I hate I do (Romans 7:14).
We
say things like, Cross my heart and hope
to die. Or, On the eyes of my sainted
mother. Do those words make us more likely to tell the truth? [1] John
Stott writes: Swearing is really a
pathetic confession of our own dishonesty. [2] The reason we have to swear
oaths is our tendency to lie.
We
shouldn’t need to sign our name, or cross our heart, or provide collateral. Our
lives should be enough to assure people they can expect us to tell the truth.
Can
you commit to always tell the truth? If not, why?
[1] I
am indebted to Pastor Stephen Sizer, Vicar of Christ Church – Virginia Water,
UK, for some of this article’s seed thoughts. I can no longer find the source
material.
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