Word-Wrangling: A New Rodeo Event for Preachers?

Elated-pastorI’m not sure most of us preachers fully believe the scriptural command to avoid word fights:

“Remind them of these things, and solemnly charge them in the presence of God not to wrangle about words, which is useless and leads to the ruin of the hearers” (2 Tim. 2:14, NASB).

After all, aren’t some words worth wrangling over?

“Wrangling about words” conjures images of cowboys at the corral trying to tame a bucking theological term that won’t hold still.

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It’s an interesting translation of the Greek logomacheo, with the logo meaning word and macheo referring to fighting. Wrangling is as good a translation as any. Maybe wrestling, or simply “fighting over words.”  (Logomacheo is found only here in the New Testament, but the noun logomachia, found in 1 Timothy 6:4, is translated “disputes about words, out of which arise envy, strife, abusive language, evil suspicions and constant friction between men of depraved mind and deprived of the truth.” A little free information there).

Be that as it may, many of us preachers do love to argue about words. I wonder why that is.

Paul suggests it’s because of our “depraved minds,” those old natures which love a good dare, a challenge, a fight.

A pastor friend said, “When I was a young pastor, there is nothing I enjoyed more than arguing with another preacher about some issue or other.” He grew out of it, thankfully.

Well, why shouldn’t we love a good fight over biblical words? Here are some reasons why Paul says it’s a bad idea:

  • It’s useless (2 Tim. 2:14). That is, it settles nothing.
  • It leads to the ruin of the hearers (2 Tim. 2:14 again). The word ruin is literally catastrophe and means “destruction.”
  • And according to 1 Timothy 6:4-5, such wrangling leads to “envy, strife, abusive language, evil suspicions, and constant friction.” 

Looks like some excellent reasons to avoid that corral and leave those mavericks to someone else.

A couple of current stories about word-wrangling which may (or may not) make the point ...

Recently, we read of a dispute concerning the hymn “In Christ Alone,” in which a denomination wanted to change one line before including it in their new hymnal. “The wrath of God was satisfied” would become “The love of God was magnified.” The hymn-writers refused to consent to the change, and the denomination dropped the hymn.

That set off the firestorm.

The issue was not the wrath of God, as we might have expected, but His wrath being “satisfied.” A spokesperson said it smacked of God making Jesus die to satisfy something in Himself. Accusers and defenders came out of the woodwork. Charges of liberalism and heresy were flung back and forth. Soon people were slamming that denomination, drawing far-fetched conclusions and making ugly accusations. It all went downhill from there.

“It’s useless, and leads to the ruin of the hearers.” Yep. It does that.

Second story: One day recently, a Facebook friend messaged that something I’d written several years ago was being ripped apart on a website devoted to discussing theology. I went there, read the original post (after going back to see what I’d written in the first place, the piece which ticked someone off), and then began following the discussion back and forth.

It was rather amusing. How anyone could draw the conclusions the original critic was posting was beyond me. I thought about entering the discussion to explain a point or two, without being either defensive or combative, and eventually did so. A click at the bottom of the screen, and thereafter every comment made in this discussion was sent to my mailbox as an email.

My mailbox filled up quickly.

The critic, to my delight, lumped me in with Charles Haddon Spurgeon, saying my thought was in line with the great British preacher, but this still does not make a thing right. No argument there. (But I’ll take being thrown in with Spurgeon any day of the week.)

The discussion grew bizarre. One commenter posted a link to some weird preacher and said, “Well, at least you aren’t like this guy.” Just below, a friend of the critic exploded, “You are saying [friend’s name] is like that person? You ought to be ashamed!”

After a couple of days of this, the webmaster sent a note saying the discussion had gotten ugly and he was taking it all down.

Was anything accomplished? As far as I can tell, that harsh exchange may have produced the following four results:

1. Some people got angry with their brothers in the ministry, thus violating the law of love by making baseless accusations.

2. No one had his mind changed on anything but became entrenched in his position, whether right or wrong.

3. Some probably walked away from their computers in an angry mood and became troublesome for their spouses or children until they recovered.

4. The owner of the website probably repented that he encouraged such debate in the first place.

All of that is well and good.

I can, however, think of one sound reason for disputing over words.

If we do not say what we mean by our words, the enemy may move into the vacuum and make them mean what he says and thus corrupt our message.

Therefore, we need to clarify what a word means and to state clearly what we mean in using that word.

What we must be wary of is fighting over words. Doing so puffs up the flesh, gives occasion to the enemy to laugh at us, angers our opponents, dishonors Christ and diverts God’s people from the work we were engaged in.

The rest of 2 Timothy has more to say on this subject. You’ll enjoy reading it and benefit from reflecting on it.

Dr. Joe McKeever writes from the vantage point of more than 60 years as a disciple of Jesus, more than 50 years preaching His gospel and more than 40 years of cartooning for every imaginable Christian publication.

For the original article, visit joemckeever.com.

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