According
to an Associated Press survey from several years ago, 64% of Americans confess
to using profanity. Personally, I think
it is higher. Let me ask, should this be
seen as a problem in society? It should
be because it demonstrates that nearly a super-majority of America’s population
has a Mt. Everest-sized character problem.
Here are three evidences that profanity is about character. 1)
Anger-driven. When someone
rattles off a series of expletives cutting people down like a weed-eater - it
is about character. 2) Vulgar humor.
When someone feels compelled to include gutter-language in every joke –
it is about character. 3) Thoughtlessness. When someone spews forth their sewer-mouth
around young children, true ladies and gentlemen and in general public settings
(like social media) – it is about character.
I
want to challenge us as a society to raise our standards. Let us start a hash tag campaign
#nomoreprofanity to raise awareness of this issue and use positive peer
pressure to encourage people to change their language.
Jesus
is a model for raising standards through His famous Sermon on the Mount. He once said, “Let what you say be simply
‘Yes’ or ‘No’; anything more than this comes from evil.” (Matthew 5:37) This means to keep our language simple and
clean and if we have a problem with profanity it is because we have a problem
with our heart.
Changing how we speak can be difficult, if we do it on our own. However, if we call upon Jesus and ask Him to change our heart, then He will touch our lips too. May Jesus be our hope for today and our standard for living.