With hedge-like foliage and less-dense blossoms, these "bush roses" provide a boundary for the front of our yard, hopefully adding to a "good report" impression of the people living here! |
Ah—words from the past, back to my childhood. Who said them to me, I can’t remember, but I can still hear the haughty tone in which the youthful speaker delivered them: “If you can’t say anything nice, then don’t say anything at all!” Words have the power to lift or to wound, and children are especially adept at the wounding skills. The apostle Paul certainly experienced “wounding.” In listing the good, bad and ugly he’d been subjected to as a Christian leader, he said he’d been target of “bad report and good report” (2 Corinthians 6:8).
I
wonder if he had those reports in mind when he penned his list of things to
think about, and included “whatever is of good report.” The original Greek word
is euphemos, from which we get our English word “euphemism,” defined
as “the substitution of an agreeable or inoffensive expression for one that may
offend or suggest something unpleasant.”
You’ve probably heard the witty story of a family that hired a writer to
put together a family history. They
didn’t know what to do with a black sheep family member who was electrocuted
after being convicted of murder. So this
is what the writer came up with: “He occupied the chair of applied electricity
at one of this nation’s well-known institutions. He was committed to his
position and literally died in the harness.”
Okay,
done with jokes. The Bible’s euphemos has a more positive spin,
referring to “words or sounds of good omen.”
The “sounds” may refer to non-verbal ways, like grunts or sighs, to
indicate agreement.
I
find each of Paul’s “think on these things” challenging. But this one really
ties together the thought-life and the mouth-life. When I run against something
negative, can I hand it over to God for help in finding that kernel of “good
report”?
About
thirty-five years ago I went through a discouraging, negative situation. I was
unemployed, grieving, and working as hard as I could to empty out my parents’
home after their deaths so it could be sold. One day a former colleague called,
asking me to do a special writing assignment for her publication. I was so
discouraged and doubtful of my abilities that I tried to turn her down. She wouldn’t accept my “no.” Wisely, she knew accomplishing something
outside my negatives would be helpful in my long journey to wellness. “I have a Bible verse for you,” she
said. I could almost see this short,
intense older woman standing hands-on-hips with a finger wagging at me. “It’s
Nehemiah 8:20, ‘The joy of the Lord is your strength.’” I accepted her rebuke, and the assignment,
and it turned out a good thing for me to do. She turned my “bad report” (of my
emotional state) to a “good report” of hope for how the Lord would help stretch
me and heal me.
Turning
“bad reports” into “good reports” is a lifelong learning process. It helps to keep eternity’s purposes in
mind. Jonathan Edwards, the famed
Puritan preacher, had a list of “resolutions” he followed, and one was this:
“Resolved, never to do anything which I would be afraid to do if it were the
last hour of my life.” Our ability to faithfully share “good reports” that
glorify Christ will impact others long
after we’re gone.
Next: "virtue"
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