The Everyday, Easy-To-Overlook, Taken for Granted, Most Potentially Destructive Yet Potentially Life-Saving Part of My Marriage: My Mouth

TALK ISN’T CHEAP WHEN IT COSTS IN YOUR MARRIAGE 

I haven’t even been married even a year but long enough to notice some things about how time changes the relationship. I’m sure it changes every relationship in a similar way; I just have never noticed it quite so profoundly until this one. Perhaps because this one means the most. And the one thing that has changed the most quickly and obviously and yet the most subtly and gradually is how I speak to my wife.

All my life and at different ages I have heard people try to minimize how much words matter. From the elementary “sticks and stones” chant to the more adolescent “talk is cheap” to modern day social media memes that I often see communicating that actions are much more important than words. I get where this is coming from. But both the Bible and my reality have proven how I speak matters as much or more than anything else I do every day, especially with my wife.

IT HAPPENED SO QUICKLY YET SO GRADUALLY

When we first got together I was so intentional about how I spoke to her. I would quote Song of Solomon to her. I was never sarcastic with her in a crude way, especially in front of others. I often complimented her and kept my mouth shut, refraining from give a solution to her problems if I thought she needed to vent. But over time, I have let things go in this area. In front of her friends and family I have made unkind sarcastic comments to her. I use the stereotypical tone when I talk to her. I go straight into problem solving mode often when she has an issue at work. I have gone long stretches without telling her she’s beautiful. Losing control of my tongue with my wife is by far the biggest problem I have after just a few months of marriage.

     Losing control of my tongue with my wife is by far the biggest problem I have after just a few months of marriage.

What kills me is that you hear this all the time in real life and on TV. Women often complain that men become more likely to take them for granted with time. And I’ve tried to avoid that and (by God’s grace) succeeded in things like making regular date nights and doing the dishes. But this area is one where I am completely and unequivocally not doing as well as eight months ago. And in a lot of ways that affects everything else–even the good that I do.

ONE OF THE EASIEST TO UNDERSTAND CHAPTERS IN THE  BIBLE

It’s not just my experience that proves this, though. It’s the Bible. In James 3, he makes three very simple points about the tongue.  He says 1) the tongue controls everything else, like the rudder on a ship,  2) it cannot be dominated because it’s too evil and potent, and 3) it’s hypocritical to use the tongue for both blessing and cursing. In typical Bible fashion, it seems impossible to reconcile all of these ideas into practical reality. If I cannot tame the tongue, why is it so important to God that we control it?  And why am I so guilty for using it incorrectly?

I think God, through James, is making it clear that it is a battle to use your words for good and that we cannot be complacent. He says the tongue is a world of unrighteousness, is filled with deadly poison and stains the whole body. Think about that for a second.  Think about how crucial the tongue is as the body’s controlling part, combined with its nature. It’s like the Joker of the human body: malevolent, bent on chaos, and capable of coercing the weaker to follow its lead. The default flow of human nature is away from God. The tongue is the leader and greatest weapon of our depravity.  It trends away from blessing others with our words and towards insulting, false flattery, gossiping, talking instead of listening and countless other ways we misuse our mouth. Like fire it is deadly when not controlled vigilantly. It is that strong, that influential and that destructive. I’m confident that I could wash dishes every day for the rest of my life but if I don’t use conversation for my wife’s edification, then I’m missing what James is teaching. I concede that the memes are right–that if I say “I love you” but do not do practical action to show it then I am also wrong.  But James doesn’t say that the hands or the feet control and corrupt everything else.  The tongue does.

     Think about how crucial the tongue is as the body’s controlling part, combined with its nature. It’s like the Joker of the human body: malevolent, bent on chaos, and capable of coercing the weaker to follow its lead.

TRUTH IS APPLICATION AS WELL AS UNDERSTANDING

The rest of Scripture coincides with the importance of words.  The biggest book of the Bible is a group songs, or words, to God.  The only book dedicated entirely to marriage, the aforementioned Song of Songs, is primarily words the two lovers speak to each other.  Paul says words are essential for both witnessing about and accepting Jesus.  And Jesus preached that the mouth is a reflection of the heart and that we will be judged for every word we say.

So if I can offer anything to married men this Valentine’s Day is that by all means be romantic with your wife.  Serve her in practical ways.  But remember that the Bible can be counter-intuitive.  We think actions speak louder than words, but show me a man who uses his tongue well and I know you’ll see a man who does well with the rest of his life. Because if you can control the Joker, you can handle his cronies.  How we speak (and don’t speak) to others is the litmus test for human behavior.  The tongue is the control center.  We talk often in the church about guarding our hearts and our minds.  But we desperately need to guard our words as well.  Especially to the one we committed to at an altar once up on time – with words no less – to love unconditionally.

Gowdy Cannon

Gowdy Cannon

I am currently the pastor of Bear Point FWB Church in Sesser, IL. I previously served for 17 years as the associate bilingual pastor at Northwest Community Church in Chicago. My wife, Kayla, and I have been married over 8 years and have a 4-year-old son, Liam Erasmus, and a baby, Bo Tyndale. I have been a student at Welch College in Nashville and at Moody Theological Seminary in Chicago. I love The USC (the real one in SC, not the other one in CA), Seinfeld, John 3:30, Chick-fil-A, Dumb and Dumber, the book of Job, preaching and teaching, and arguing about sports.

7 thoughts on “The Everyday, Easy-To-Overlook, Taken for Granted, Most Potentially Destructive Yet Potentially Life-Saving Part of My Marriage: My Mouth

  • February 8, 2016 at 10:45 am
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    Great reminder for me today.

    Reply
    • February 8, 2016 at 11:38 am
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      Agreed. For whatever reason, I tend to be less careful with my tone when I speak to my wife than with anyone else. And it should not be that way.

      Reply
  • February 9, 2016 at 8:43 am
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    Phill’s comment made me think of something that I wonder is true of other people. I speak to my wife differently (in a bad way at times) as well and I’m sure some of it is complacency and familiarity but some of it I think is that I know she can take it. But I also realize that just because someone can take something doesn’t mean they should.

    Reply
  • February 9, 2016 at 11:12 am
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    Good stuff to remember. The title is very Leslie Knope-ian, though. As a lover of sarcasm, I have to be cautious of my tone when talking to my hubs. Although sarcasm is something we both appreciate as part of our senses of humor, it can be used negatively.

    Reply
    • February 9, 2016 at 11:18 am
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      Yes, I gave Gowdy a hard time for the length of the title. It does feel like something Leslie Knope would have come up with.

      Sarcasm is one of the chief ways I communicate. And typically, it’s playful and harmless. But sometimes, I allow myself to use it in a way that is negative and hurtful.

      Reply
  • February 9, 2016 at 11:31 am
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    I’ll take Leslie as a compliment! But seriously, I could have taken out a phrase or two and not lost much. Amy I don’t know if you are aware but Mike and I (and maybe others) had a long conversation about the use of “sarcasm” as a negative form of communication. I woefully underestimated how much my wife and I use it harmlessly and even jovially. I learned something from that conversation and Mike has me wanting to read Blink or whatever that book is.

    Reply
  • February 9, 2016 at 11:52 am
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    Any time you can have a conversation about sarcasm and Malcolm Gladwell, it’s a good day. Blink is his best work I’ve read so far, though I enjoyed Outliers as well.

    Reply

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