And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him. (Colossians 3:17)
“If
you don’t have anything good to say, don’t say anything.” We’ve all heard some
variation of this saying. I like the version that uses double negatives: “If
you don’t have nothing good to say, don’t say nothing,” but that doesn’t mean what
we want it to mean. Another somewhat similar instruction is “Be nice.” The
problem with all these sorts of instructions, including, “Do unto others as you
would have them do unto you”, is definition. What constitutes something “good
to say”? Or “Nice”? And what if what you would have others do to you is to
leave you alone, but the person next door wants people to stop by and chat?
The
greatest commandment, according to Jesus, is that we love God with all our
hearts, souls, minds, and strengths, and love our neighbors as ourselves. In
today’s verse, we’re told to do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus,
meaning that everything we do should be what Jesus would do if He were in our
shoes. But Jesus wasn’t always “nice” and didn’t refrain from saying things His
audience wouldn’t (and didn’t) like. At
the same time, I believe that Jesus obeyed these teachings with one tiny difference:
He did things in the name of the Father.
Getting
back to the verse of the day, here’s the question. When Paul wrote “whatever…in
word or deed,” what is left out? In case it’s not obvious, according to Merriam
Webster, a deed is “something that is done.” Another source mentioned consciously or
deliberately, so for the sake of the argument, we’ll exclude automatic biological
functions. Volition is at least marginally involved. At the risk of being too
obvious, everything else, including thinking and speaking counts as a deed.
Thinking
is the toughest one, because our bodies don’t really tend to wander too far from
our will. Our feet don’t generally take us somewhere without our will dictating
the location. On the other hand, our emotions and our thoughts are known to
wander. This may be a challenge for us for 2026, and the test we might apply to
our thoughts, our feelings, and the things that come out of our mouths is a
simple one. Can we give thanks to God the Father for them?
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