Past Imperfect

Liz and Lucille find out that someone has been accused of doing something they didn’t do. Can innocence be proven?

Before You Listen

After you listen

Memory Verse

“Likewise the tongue is a small part of the body, but it makes great boasts. Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small spark”

Audio Icon   James 3:5

Quiz

Reflect

In this episode, Liz and Lucille find out that someone has been accused of doing something they didn’t do. Have you ever committed murder? Probably not. But in a way, we all have—with our tongues. What you say to or about someone can destroy a person's life. Your words can permanently damage someone’s reputation. They can cause people to suffer for things they didn’t do. . They can take away a person’s motivation to work hard and accomplish the things he or she is gifted and called to do. In this episode, Charles lost 30 years of his life because of a lie, and because people gossiped about him, destroying his reputation and his life.

Sometimes you might be drawn into gossip about a person because it’s a way to belong, to connect with others. It often seems easier to be negative than positive. But when we keep a tight rein on our tongues, we not only keep ourselves from hurting others, we please God, and we witness to others about walking God's way (see James 1:26-27).

Want to dig deeper into what the Bible says about honesty? Read Proverbs 12:22, Philippians 4:8-9, and John 8:32.

Challenge

Read James 3:3-12 during your devotions. Talk with your family about the word pictures James uses here—a bit in a horse’s mouth, a big ship steered by a small rudder, a forest set on fire by a spark, a small part of the body that corrupts the whole body. The tongue is tricky: It can produce both good and evil. Who can tame the tongue? No person can—only God!

For one whole day avoid saying anything negative about people; only say good things. Remember, “If you can't say something nice, it's better to say nothing at all.”