James 1:21 (NLT)
21 So get rid of all the filth and evil in your lives,
and humbly accept the word God has planted in your hearts, for it has the power
to save your souls.
We are called upon to suppress other corrupt affections,
as well as rash anger: Lay aside all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness,
v. 21. The word here translated filthiness signifies those lusts which have the
greatest turpitude and sensuality in them; and the words rendered superfluity
of naughtiness may be understood of the overflowings of malice or any other
spiritual wickednesses. Hereby we are taught, as Christians, to watch against,
and lay aside, not only those more gross and fleshly dispositions and affections
which denominate a person filthy, but all the disorders of a corrupt heart,
which would prejudice it against the word and ways of God. [Matthew Henry
Commentary]
In his book Over the Edge: Death in the Grand Canyon,
Michael P. Ghiglieri chronicles the nearly 700 deaths that have occurred in the
Grand Canyon since the 1870s. Of course most people aren't shocked that fatal
mishaps occur there. After all, the Grand Canyon is 277 miles long, up to 18
miles wide, and attains a depth of over a mile (6,000 feet). The extreme temperatures
(which often exceed 100 degrees) can quickly lead to heatstroke and
dehydration.
So how did most of the deaths occur? Air crashes account
for the largest number of deaths at the Grand Canyon. Floods have claimed the
lives of some of the river rafters. Other despondent souls have taken their own
lives. But according to Ghiglieri, a number of people have gone "over the
edge" and fallen to their death through their own carelessness.
Specifically, they ignored posted warnings and confidently walked out on to
dangerous precipices.
For example, in 1992, a 38-year-old father jokingly tried
to frighten his teenage daughter by leaping on to a guard wall. He flailed his
arms as he pretended to lose his balance. Then he comically "fell" on
the canyon side onto a ledge he assumed was safe. But sadly, after ignoring
numerous warning signs, he lost his footing and fell 400 feet into the void
below.
Then in 2012, an 18-year-old woman who was hiking on the
North Rim Trail decided to venture off the beaten path to have her picture
taken at a spot known as Inspiration Point. As she sat down on the ledge of the
1,500-foot deep canyon, the rocks gave way, and she plummeted to her death.
These deaths were not just tragic; they were also
completely avoidable. Does anyone truly want his or her last words before
"AAAAHHHHHH" to be, "Look at how close I can get to the rim
without fall …. ?" Call me overly cautious, but without a hang-glider or
parachute attached to my body, I can see the Canyon just fine 10 yards back
from the precipice.
And yet many of us approach sin by asking the question,
"How close can I get without crossing the line?" We avoid God's
warning signs and then edge right up to disaster, confident that we—unlike
other people—can avoid the crash. Like the child who listens to a parent's
warning and then does everything to push the boundaries, we rush to the edge of
sin with a false sense of security.
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