James 4:11, 12; "Stop talking harshly about each other. He who speaks harshly of his brother, or who judges his brother, speaks harshly of the law and judges the law; and, if you judge the law, you are not a doer of the law but a judge of it. One is law-giver and judge, he who is able to save and to destroy. Who are you to judge your neighbour?"
The word James uses for to speak harshly of, or, to slander is katalalein. Usually this verb means to slander someone when he is not there to defend himself. This sin slander (the noun is katalalia) is condemned all through the Bible. It is the Psalmist’s accusation against the wicked man: “You sit and speak against your brother; you slander your own mother’s son” (Psalm 50:20). The Psalmist hears God saying, “Him who slanders his neighbour secretly I will destroy” (Psalm 101:5). Paul lists it among the sins which are characteristic of the unredeemed evil of the pagan world (Romans 1:30); and it is one of the sins which he fears to find in the warring Church of Corinth (2 Corinthians 12:20). It is significant to note that in both these passages slander comes in immediate connection with gossip. Katalalia is the sin of those who meet in corners and gather in little groups and pass on confidential titbits of information which destroy the good name of those who are not there to defend themselves. The same sin is condemned by Peter (1 Peter 2:1).
There is great necessity for this warning. People are slow to realize that there are few sins which the Bible so unsparingly condemns as the sin of irresponsible and malicious gossip. There are few activities in which the average person finds more delight than this; to tell and to listen to the slanderous story—especially about some distinguished person—is for most people a fascinating activity. We do well to remember what God thinks of it. James condemns it for two fundamental reasons.
(i) It is a breach of the royal law that we should love our neighbour as ourselves (James 2:8; Leviticus 19:18). Obviously a man cannot love his neighbour as himself and speak slanderous evil about him. Now, if a man breaks a law knowingly, he sets himself above the law. That is to say, he has made himself a judge of the law. But a man’s duty is not to judge the law, but to obey it. So the man who speaks evil of his neighbour has appointed himself a judge of the law and taken to himself the right to break it, and therefore stands condemned.
(ii) It is an infringement of the prerogative of God. To slander our neighbour is, in fact, to pass judgment upon him. And no human being has any right to judge any other human; the right of judgment belongs to God alone.
It is God alone who is able to save and to destroy. This great prerogative runs all through Scripture. “I kill and I make alive,” says God (Deuteronomy 32:39). “The Lord kills and brings to life,” says Hannah in her prayer (1 Samuel 2:6). “Am I God to kill and to make alive?” is the shocked question of the Israelite king to whom Naaman came with a demand for a cure for his leprosy (2 Kings 5:7). Jesus warns that we should not fear men, who at the worst can only kill the body, but should fear him who can destroy both body and soul (Matthew 10:28). As the Psalmist had it, it is to God alone that the issues of life and of death belong (Psalm 68:20). To judge another is to take to ourselves a right to do what God alone has the right to do; and he is a reckless man who deliberately infringes the prerogatives of God.
We might think that to speak evil of our neighbour is not a very serious sin. But Scripture would say that it is one of the worst of all because it is a breach of the royal law and an infringement of the rights of God.
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