37. But let your communication--"your word," in ordinary intercourse,
be,
Yea, yea; Nay, nay--Let a simple Yes and No suffice in
affirming the truth or the untruth of anything. (See
Jas 5:12;
2Co 1:17, 18).
for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil--not "of the evil
one"; though an equally correct rendering of the words, and one which
some expositors prefer. It is true that all evil in our world is
originally of the devil, that it forms a kingdom at the head of which he
sits, and that, in every manifestation of it he has an active part. But
any reference to this here seems unnatural, and the allusion to this
passage in the Epistle of James
(Jas 5:12)
seems to show that this is not the sense of it: "Let your yea be yea;
and your nay, nay; lest ye fall into condemnation." The
untruthfulness of our corrupt nature shows itself not only in the
tendency to deviate from the strict truth, but in the disposition to
suspect others of doing the same; and as this is not diminished, but
rather aggravated, by the habit of confirming what we say by an oath,
we thus run the risk of having all reverence for God's holy name, and
even for strict truth, destroyed in our hearts, and so "fall into
condemnation." The practice of going beyond Yes and No in affirmations
and denials--as if our word for it were not enough, and we expected
others to question it--springs from that vicious root of untruthfulness
which is only aggravated by the very effort to clear ourselves of the
suspicion of it. And just as swearing to the truth of what we say
begets the disposition it is designed to remove, so the love and reign
of truth in the breasts of Christ's disciples reveals itself so plainly
even to those who themselves cannot be trusted, that their simple Yes
and No come soon to be more relied on than the most solemn
asseverations of others. Thus does the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,
like a tree cast into the bitter waters of human corruption, heal and
sweeten them.
JFB.
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