
Three ways to bring your tongue under control.
By Vasthi Reyes Acosta
I was in the car with my husband driving to meet our family for
lunch. My husband chose a route to the restaurant that, in my
opinion, took more time. I knew we had time constraints because
we had to meet friends after lunch. I sat in the car fuming. After
driving in this area for over twenty years, why does he still take the
longest route? Do I have to do all the thinking in this family? Before
long, I had whipped myself into a quarrelsome attitude because of
something as inane as the driving route to a restaurant. In the
meantime, my husband and children knew that Mom was in one of her
“moods.” They didn’t know if they had caused it; they just knew to be
very cautious. I had just become a “constant dripping,” and my family
was living on the corner of the roof:
“Better to live on a corner of the roof than share a house with a
quarrelsome wife” (Prov. 21:9).
“Better to live in a desert than with a quarrelsome and illtempered
wife” (Prov. 21:19).
“A quarrelsome wife is like a constant dripping” (Prov. 19:13).
It was a clear picture of who I was. I stared at those verses and
remembered scenes at work or home where someone around me
whispered, “She’s in one of those moods,” and I could sense they’d
rather be anyplace else but near me. My family and friends were
often walking on eggshells, afraid to say or do anything.
The verdict was in: Guilty. I was a quarrelsome, ill-tempered
woman. Even I hated being around me. I cried out, “Lord, why am
I like this? Help me. Change me.”
God showed me the three culprits at work in my life: pride,
discontent, and pleasure-seeking.
Pride
Proverbs 21:4 says, “Haughty eyes and a proud heart, the lamp of
the wicked, are sin!” Pride was footloose and free in my heart. I
wanted control. I thought I was better at deciding the route we should
take. And my desire for control mushroomed into believing that I
always knew better than my husband. This is a common disease
among wives, even when our husbands have proven themselves to be
responsible, thoughtful, and intelligent men. Why else would we have
married them? Still we want to believe that we know everything.
Discontent
Discontent is a sneaky one. It creeps into our thoughts without
much warning. I was discontent with the route taken to a
restaurant. How silly is that? Yet, it was powerful enough to ruin
my family’s lunch date.
A quarrelsome woman that harbors discontent is never satisfied.
She wants her husband to bring her flowers. One day he does. Oh,
but they weren’t red roses. She is never satisfied. She is always
craving more.
Yet the truth is that “…all day long he craves for more, but the
righteous give without sparing” (Prov. 21:26). Why not stop
thinking of what we can get and think of what we can give?
Pleasure Seeker
Proverbs 21:17 says, “He who loves pleasure will become poor;
whoever loves wine and oil will never be rich.” I love pleasure.
Who doesn’t? Is that your goal in life? Are you constantly planning
and thinking about your next vacation? Is pleasure your focus? And
if you don’t get what your heart is set on, Watch Out World!
You didn’t get to see your favorite TV show or you didn’t get to
go to the gym or have lunch. Instantly you put on your quarrelsome
face and no one can stand being near you. The world owes you.
This seeking of pleasure can lead to becoming what the Bible
labels a sluggard. “The sluggard’s craving will be the death of him,
because his hands refuse to work” (Prov. 21:25). We become lazy.
We don’t feel like cleaning, cooking, teaching, studying, or going
to church. We crave only pleasure and become sluggards at our
responsibilities. We all have duties to perform, given to us by God
in His ultimate wisdom. We are to do the work every day that He
places in our hands with an open and grateful heart.
What must I do to leave this quarrelsome woman behind?
Once I recognized I was a quarrelsome woman and these three
culprits were wreaking havoc in my life, I determined to change
and become a woman who is pleasing in God’s sight. The Holy
Spirit helped me focus on: humility, contentment, and trust.
Humility
“Before his downfall a man’s heart is proud, but humility comes
before honor,” says Proverbs 18:12. “Humility and the fear of the
Lord bring wealth and honor and life” (Prov. 22:4).
It’s hard for me to be humble. It’s so easy to think more of
ourselves than is true. How can we stay humble? I found it helpful
to make a list of the things God had given me. When I consider the
magnitude of God’s gifts in my life, I feel humbled. This same list
can be written about the key people in your life. When I look at the
blessings these people bring to my life, I have a quick attitude
change.
Contentment
I think of contentment as coming to terms with what God has
given to us. “A man’s steps are directed by the Lord. How then can
anyone understand his own way?” (Prov. 24:24). If you believe His
Word, then why do you fuss? It’s time to put God’s Word to the
test. Stop fussing and craving for more, and begin to look at what
you do have.
Be still and know that your life is in His hands and rejoice.
Rejoice in what He has given you. Rejoice in where He has you.
Rejoice if you have a job. Rejoice that you have a family who loves
you – even when you have them living on the corner of the roof.
Rejoice that you have life. Rejoice in the awesome God you serve.
Rejoice in the work He has given you to do – it is a privilege.
Are You A Quarrelsome Woman?
- Are you content or complaining?
- Are you rejoicing or miserable?
- Are you trusting or maneuvering?
- Are you giving or craving more?
- Are you busy doing God’s work
or seeking your own pleasure?
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Decide today what kind of woman God wants you to be. Then take
the necessary steps to become a woman that is pleasing in God’s sight.
Meditate and think about these verses:
“A wife of noble character who can find? She is worth far more
than rubies. Her husband has full confidence in her and lacks
nothing of value. She brings him good, not harm, all the days of her
life…She is clothed with strength and dignity; she can laugh at the
days to come. She speaks with wisdom, and faithful instruction is
on her tongue” (Prov. 31:10-12, 25-26).
Trust
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own
understanding” (Prov. 3:5). Place all your trust in God, not your
own thinking. Look where my thoughts got me. Don’t trust your
feelings, opinions, or rights. Trust in God and His Word. God has
ordained even this hardship in your life. Accept it and move
forward in His strength. “There is no wisdom, no insight, no plan
that can succeed against the Lord” (Prov. 21:30).
How reassuring is that? What a solid foundation to stand on!
Trusting in God will lead you to obey His Word. Obedience to His
Word will help you be humble and find contentment. The
quarrelsome woman will be banished.
The next time my husband took the long way to a destination, I
took a deep breath, and enjoyed the beautiful scenery along the
way – scenery I had never noticed before! I chose not to be in
control of every little thing and accepted the freedom of not
making every little decision. What a difference it made!
Vashti Reyes Acosta serves as both a teacher and assistant
superintendent of Sunday school at her church in New York, NY.
Additionally, she is a retreat and conference speaker. Vashti is the wife
of a New York State Supreme Court Justice and mother of two.
Also read:
JBU 2005 Conference Update
Returning Thanks
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