Gottlieb_Christ_preaching_at_Capernaum

Years ago, I was washing up some pots, just before dinner, when all of a sudden a word popped into my head, seemingly out of nowhere. I turned around and blurted out to my kids, who were doing homework around the kitchen table,

“Sophistry! The word that keeps coming to me is sophistry.”

Of course everyone burst out laughing because no one had a clue what I was talking about or what that word even meant.

The word sophistry describes language and logic used by Satan, in Milton’s epic poem Paradise Lost. Sophistry could describe the logic used by a lawyer intent upon persuading a jury to find a criminal not guilty. When the intent of words is not to reveal the truth but to confuse people, the speaker is using sophistry.

Sophistry is all too common in our society, from the world of politics to the world of advertising. Modern man uses words to influence people for their own purposes.

Just the other day, the word sophistry popped into my head again because we often resort to sophistry without realizing exactly what we are doing. Words often keep us running in circles and keep us from discovering freedom and truth. Thank God for the power of the Holy Spirit. The word of God cuts through sophistry like a two-edged sword.

My only hope of living in reality, to cut through lies, to see myself  and others in truth and to embrace truth, is by embracing the Word made flesh. Sometimes I might think that I am in the truth or that I am ruthlessly speaking the stark truth to another, but if I do not speak with Love, it is still sophistry.

The evil one can speak a condemning truth, a truth without love that seeks to destroy. Only God and those who carry the Love of God speak a liberating truth that heals and sets free.

Ponder: When do I use convoluted language that serves to confuse myself and others?

Lord, pour your light of truth into my mind, that I might speak and write wisdom and truth which will shed light and understanding in other's lives.

Copyright 2014, Melanie Jean Juneau

Painting: "Christ preaching at Capernaum," by Maurycy Gottlieb (1856-1859)