Everyone must be quick to hear, slow to speak and slow to anger. (James 1:19)Clean, simple, easy to understand ... no questions. So ... why is it so rare? (It's ironic, in fact, that James says just two verses later, "Prove yourselves doers of the word, and not merely hearers who delude themselves" (James 1:22) when we are so very bad at doing what James 1:19 says.)
The other day I saw a news item over the whole Nancy Guthrie story. NBC has been supportive, but ... some viewers are angry that a few of the news people aren't wearing yellow ribbons. Really? That's an issue to be angry about? I was reading the other day about a fairly recent phenomenon referred to as "outrage culture." It's not that outrage is new. It's that the culture is outraged rather than merely individuals. Or there's "cancel culture" where we shoot down an entire life because of social outrage. It seems like we're a people who are far more easily offended these days. We Christians aren't immune. In fact, we're prone to it. But ... we label it "righteous indignation." Yet, we have this command from James. He isn't vague. We are supposed to be quick to listen. We are supposed to be slow to speak and slow to anger. Instead we're not very good listeners, but we are really quick on the mouth draw and fast to shoot off in anger. Social media doesn't help. We have a louder platform for our speech and outrage ... sorry ... righteous indignation. But James doesn't leave us to guess why we should be slow to anger. "For the anger of man does not achieve the righteousness of God" (James 1:20) "Hang on, James. Are you saying we aren't making the world a better place in our speedy, angry responses?" Exactly. That's precisely what James is saying.
We Christians--you know ... people of the book ... people with God's Word to guide us--think we have an obligation to correct sin where we find it and we will use moral outrage to do it. Mind you, Jesus did confront sin on occasion in His ministry on earth, but His normal operating procedure was not outrage, but love. We might want to reconsider our approach ... to so many people and things today. Maybe yelling at that driver that cut you off isn't the best response. "Quick to anger" doesn't accomplish what God wants. Maybe we should try listening more to people who disagree with us ... instead of waiting for their lips to stop moving and telling them every way they were wrong. Maybe we should be speaking the truth in love and pursuing their best interests--which begins with knowing Christ--rather than using our tongues and our anger to ... fail to accomplish what we think it should ... what God says it doesn't.