[forthright] Before You Forward That Message

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From: Forthright Magazine <ba@...>
Date: Fri, 03 Sep 2004 13:02:12 -0500
Forthright Magazine
http://www.forthright.net
Straight to the Cross


COLUMN: Heavenly Connections

Before You Forward That Message
by Tim Hall

"Don't believe everything you hear" is an adage
I've heard all my life.  It's good advice, even
when the thing I've heard is something I want to
hear.  In fact, that may be the most important
time to apply this wisdom.

Consider an e-mail I received just yesterday.  The
message talked about a political candidate that I
personally hope is defeated in November.  The
message reported a speech in which the candidate
was attempting to display his piety by citing John
3:16 as his favorite verse: "For God so loved the
world that He gave His only begotten Son, that
whoever believes in Him should not perish but have
everlasting life" (NKJV).  A problem arose,
however, when the candidate gave the reference as
John 16:3, a passage in which Jesus says "And
these things they will do to you because they have
not known the Father nor Me."

It is quite ironic, isn't it, that such a slip
would occur?  The message went on to say that this
miscue might be seen as a Divine sanction against
the candidate.  To quote from the e-mail: "The
Spirit works in strange ways, doesn't He?"
Indeed, it might seem providential -- if it was
true.

There's good reason to suspect that this incident
never happened.  According to information on
Snopes.com, the incident has been attributed to
both of the major candidates for President, just
as it was attributed to Al Gore in a smear attempt
in 1999.  If Snopes is right, then the message I
received is not true.

Can we trust Snopes.com, or other similar sites on
the Internet?  I often do.  When I receive an e-
mail from a government official in Nigeria
offering me several million dollars in exchange
for my help, I'm naturally suspicious.  When
another e-mail informs me that the logo for
Proctor & Gamble is a Satanic symbol, I want to
know if that's really the truth.  Another message
urges me to boycott Duncan Hines cake mixes
because of that company's connection with a
political candidate; a quick check reveals,
however, that there is no such connection.

E-mail has benefited us in many ways, but it has
also opened up new possibilities for those who
wish to deceive honest and good people.  We who
are the targets of these schemes must exercise
vigilance in what we accept as truth.  Before we
become willing participants in someone's slander,
shouldn't we make every attempt to verify the
claims?

Let us hear again Paul's admonition in Ephesians
4:25: "Therefore, putting away lying, each one
speak truth with his neighbor, for we are members
of one another."  Does this apply only to words
spoken with our lips?  Or might it also apply to
handwritten letters or electronically transmitted
e-mail or text messages?  Any communication that
Christians pass along ought to first be filtered
for inaccuracies.

The message I've just received confirms my bias
against a certain person.  I'm tempted to forward
the message to all my friends so they will share
my views.  But before I click the forward button,
I must honestly try to ascertain if it's based on
truth.

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