Views on using words to detract
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Backbiting, slandering and fault-finding for the purpose of
destroying a person’s reputation unjustly are considered major sins
in Islam. Islam always emphasizes a healthy social relationship among
members of society. Constructive criticism is accepted, however,
provided that it is not aimed at people’s personalities, but rather
to protect society from corruption and evil.
IMAM MOSTAFA AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center
of Orange County
It has been said that “great people talk about ideas, average
people talk about things, and small people talk about people.”
Indeed, when the heart is narrow, the tongue is wide.
Gossip, the Talmud teaches, is like a three-pronged tongue,
killing three people: the person about whom it is said, the person
who listens to it and the person who says it. Character
assassination, verbal violence, assaults on reputations, public and
private calumny abound in the political arena and in social circles.
While God created the universe through divine words, we can destroy
by human words.
Of the 44 sins Jewish people will enumerate in the prayer of
confession this coming Day of Atonement, 10 are sins of the tongue.
This disproportionate emphasis illustrates the seriousness with which
Judaism approaches the use of words as weapons. The innuendoes and
insinuations that are so much a part of human discourse serve only to
debase us. If only we spoke with the same knowledge we use when we
compose a telegram: we should know that as every word of a telegram
is counted and charged, so it is with every word we speak.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
People might well say that the church communicates most frequently
by rumor, gossip and innuendo. Local pastors might better complain
that our people do not tell us all of what we need to know about them
and so we hope we get their news from others.
Telling people what they should know about others so that all
might be gracious, generous and helpful is usually good. It is
difficult to imagine a situation in which “mudslinging” could be
justifiable from Christian perspectives. “Mudslinging” at faith
communities in the form of “jokes” seems frequent in our society and
some of that “mud” sticks; one of the things I love about the
Episcopal Church is that we wash our dirty laundry in public!
Hebrew Scripture, such as Psalm 15:3 and 50:20-21 and Proverbs
10:19-21 and 30:10-11, provide support for Christian Scripture, which
puts “slander,” “gossip” and “abusive language” in the same category
as “wrath, malice, quarreling, jealousy, anger, selfishness, conceit
and disorder” (2 Corinthians 12:20 and Colossians 3:8). Christians
are to tell “truth.” The “truth” we are to tell is clear in Jesus’
response to Pilate’s question in John 18:38, “What is truth?” Jesus
stands before earthly authority and power. He stands, and he stands
there.
THE VERY REV.’D CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
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