8.2- The Point of No Return
8.2-
The
Point of No Return Bill
Crowder James
3:1-12
It wasn’t as simple as just crossing
another river. By law, no Roman general could lead armed troops into Rome. So
when Julius Caesar led his Thirteenth Legion across the Rubicon River and into
Italy in 49 BC, it was an act of treason. The impact of Caesar’s decision was
irreversible, generating years of civil war before Rome's great general became
absolute ruler. Still today, the phrase “crossing the Rubicon” is a metaphor
for “passing the point of no return.”
Sometimes
we can cross a relational Rubicon with the words we say to others. Once spoken,
words can’t be taken back. They can either offer help and comfort or do damage
that feels just as irreversible as Caesar’s march on Rome. James gave us
another word picture about words when he said, “The tongue also is a fire, a
world of evil among the parts of the body. It corrupts the whole body, sets the
whole course of one’s life on fire, and it is itself set on fire by hell”
(James 3:6).
When we fear we have crossed a Rubicon with
someone, we can seek their forgiveness – and God’s (Matthew 5:23-24, I John
1:9). But even better is a daily rest in God’s Spirit, hearing Paul’s
challenge, “Let your conversation be always full of grace” (Colossians 4:6), so
that our words will not only honor our Lord, but lift up and encourage those
around us.
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