There are six things the Lord hates,
seven that are detestable to him:
17 haughty
eyes,
a lying tongue,
hands that shed innocent blood,
18 a heart that
devises wicked schemes,
feet that are quick to rush
into evil,
19 a false
witness who pours out lies
and a person who stirs up
conflict in the community.
Proverbs 6:16-19
The writer – a teacher of wisdom – boils down into a concise list a number of things which are “detestable”
in the sight of God.
At first he doesn’t seem sure if there are six or seven.
But we don’t need to take his numbers too literally, for surely a perfect, holy
God could stretch this list almost to infinity as he surveys the corruption
which human sin has wrought upon the beautiful world he created. One
commentator suggests that “six things… seven things” is “a way of showing that
the list, though specific, is not exhaustive”.
In a group of young men learning to be wise as they sit
at the feet of older men, and seeking to
model themselves on King Solomon, putting such principles in an easily
memorable, even catchy, form would make good sense.
Whatever… the seven things in verses 16-19 serve as a
challenge to anyone who takes holiness seriously, which hopefully includes you
and me.
First in the list are “haughty eyes”.
We might say “Eyes…? But what harm does a bad look
do? Looks can be deceptive, after all, and may just reflect the natural set of
someone’s features. Isn’t it possible that somebody who appears to have ‘ideas
above their station’ (as a friend of mine used to say) is in reality a
perfectly humble and friendly person?” Yes, of course. But presumably what the
writer has in mind is an attitude of arrogance and entitlement that may
in fact lie behind that snooty-seeming appearance. People who have met a top
sports star or a member of the royal family or a top politician are always
delighted when they can report “But he/she was so ordinary, so warm and down to earth!” Yes! – and why shouldn’t they
be? At bottom we are all equal in the eyes of God. Paul in Romans 12:3 tells
his readers “not to think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather...
with sober judgment”.
Is this a word to some of us who imagine we’re pretty
important? We couldn’t imagine a better example than Jesus himself, after all.
Second comes “a lying tongue”.
We might feel that that is stating the obvious, and so it
should be. But, sadly, experience suggests that in fact our world is awash with
lies. In a survey some years ago a majority of people admitted that if a lie or
half-truth was convenient to get them out of an embarrassing situation, well,
why not? Everybody does it, after all, don’t they? But Jesus tells us that it
is the devil, no less, who is “a liar and the father of lies” – and who
claimed, himself, to be “the way, the truth and the life”. Truth
matters.
I have known people who don’t just tell lies, but
who live a lie: their very lives are an attempt to appear something they
aren’t. Quite apart from the massive strain that introduces into their
day-to-day existence they would be wise to recognise the old saying that “truth
will out”. (Oh… No sooner have I written that than I realise that I have spoken
very easily of “they” and “them”… But I need to be careful! Have I never, in
some form or other, been guilty of deception?)
The next three things that God “hates” seem to form a
natural little trio: “hands that shed innocent blood”, “a heart that
devises wicked schemes” and “feet that are quick to rush into evil”.
The writer here seems to be talking about overt, blatant
wickedness, the sort of thing most ordinary, “decent” people instinctively
shrink from. But that isn’t because we’re naturally good, but because we have
been “well brought up”, in some cases because we’re good actors. We are all
sinners, and sin is something that lurks in the depths of our hearts. We
remember how Jesus, in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:21-30), taught that
mere anger or hatred (if “mere” is the right word here) are tantamount to
murder, and lustful thoughts to adultery.
Number six in the list goes back to the theme of honesty: “a
false witness who pours out lies”. If everyday, casual lies are hateful to
God, how much more those told in a court of law? Putting it in a positive
light, happy is that society or nation that has a scrupulously honest system of
law. In a country like Britain Christian people may well be called to serve in
the judiciary. It strikes me that we routinely pray for Christian nurses and
doctors, perhaps also teachers; well, how about Christian lawyers too?
And so to the last in the list: “a person who stirs up trouble
in the community”.
Such a person goes by many names. There’s the gossip, who just
doesn’t know how to keep their mouth shut. There’s the busybody, who loves to
know what’s going on in other people’s lives. There’s the hint-dropper, who
wouldn’t dream of plainly stating those juicy bits of information, but has a talent
for saying just enough to leave you feeling uncomfortable, uneasy and faintly
defiled.
What about the “whistleblower”, who draws attention to some
deep-rooted corruption in the hierarchy of which he or she is a part? They
could of course be people of great integrity and indeed courage, risking their
very employment in the interests of truth and justice. Or - do they just like
to be in the limelight? Well, God alone knows the inner workings and true
motives of every heart, so we need to tread carefully. The old adage about
always thinking the best rather than the worst of the other person if you
possibly can comes into play here…
There’s much more that could said about people who “stir up
conflict in the community”. But if nothing else it reminds us that communities matter,
relationships matter, so woe to us if we in any way poison them.
Perhaps the place to end is to recommend a re-read of the
no-nonsense words of James the brother of Jesus: yes, take a few minutes to
ponder James 3:3-12…
Father, please help me to hate what you hate,
and to love what you love, that my thoughts, my words and my actions will
reflect the beauty of Jesus. Amen.