Sunday, March 22, 2026

"The abundance of the heart" for good or evil

How can you speak good, when you are evil? For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks. (Matthew 12:34)

There were people who had seen Jesus heal a man who was blind and mute, and saw that Jesus had driven out a demon from the man. So Jesus' opponents accused that he was demonic, to explain why he had power over the demons. Did they believe themselves and their accusations? Only God knows that. I suspect that the decision to be "against" whatever Jesus did put them in a tough spot: they had to oppose whatever he did. 

This is the conversation in which Jesus reminds us: we know a tree by its fruit. The surrounding material is "A tree is known by its fruit.... The good person out of his good treasure brings forth good, and the evil person out of his evil treasure brings forth evil." (Matthew 12:35)

In the face of a miraculous good, the response of his opponents was an accusation of absolute evil. This pattern isn't uncommon, when evil accuses those who do good. Someone whose own conscience is uneasy may produce a steady stream of accusations against others. And the easily misled will be misled. 

When we say that someone "speaks from the heart" we generally mean they speak honestly and earnestly. Yet it is possible that someone can be honestly and earnestly a mess. 

"Speaking from the heart" reveals the heart. And our human hearts are not always an oasis of love. Whenever we dwell on fear or anger, we tend to speak words of fear or anger. Whenever we think too much of our own value, we speak too much of our own value. Whenever we think about enmity towards other people, we tend to speak about enmity toward other people. It's not as if our thoughts and words are far separate. 

Or as St Paul once said to identify better things and "think on these things." (Philippians 4:8)

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