A Smooth Talking Saint
I had never given much thought to today's topic, but when the Lord pressed me to study flattery, I was really amazed by the nuggets He revealed. To begin, we need to establish some definitions...
Gossip: something that is true, but negatively said
about a person when they are absent that would or could damage their reputation
or tear them down.
Slander: something that is not true and negatively
said about a person when they are present or absent that would or could damage
their reputation or tear them down.
Encouragement: something that is true and positively
said to a person when they are present that is meant for their own advantage.
Praise: something that is true and positively said
about a person when they are present or absent that would or could build their
reputation and builds them up for their own advantage.
Flattery: something that is true or untrue, but
positively said about a person when they are present or absent meant to gain a
personal advantage. It is insincere praise.
Proverbs 26:28 – A lying tongue hates those it wounds
and crushes, and a flattering mouth works ruin.
Job 32:21-22 – I will not show partiality to any man
or use flattery toward any person, for I do not know how to flatter, else my
Maker would soon take me away.
Psalm 5:9 – There is no truth in their mouth, their
inmost self is destruction, their throat is an open grave, they flatter with
their tongue.
Psalm 12:2 – Everyone utters lies to his neighbor,
with flattering lips and a double tongue (or heart) they speak.
Proverbs 7:21 KJV – With her much fair speech she
caused him to yield, with the flattering of her lips she forced him.
Scripture never mentions flattery positively or as something
that a Christian should do. In fact, the opposite is true. Christians should
not practice flattery. Honestly, I’ve never sat in a church service where a
sermon on flattery was preached. But if the scripture is going to use such
strong language around that word, then we ought to know what it is, what it
does and why we should avoid it.
In the OT, the Hebrew word that is used for flattery is:
Chalaq (khaw-lawk) [Strong's 2509] and it means smooth, smoother, use of smooth
words, smooth tongue, slippery.
In the little “c” church, I have experienced some pastors or
teachers who implement flattery to gain a following; catering messages to focus
more on discovering Your anointing, developing Your prophetic
greatness, etc. We cannot elevate the vessel who wields the gift above the
giver of the gift. When they called Jesus a ‘good teacher’, he said that no one
is good, but the Father (Mark 10:18). Meaning that our attention should always
be on Him, on the Father, because even Jesus said: I only do what I see My Father
do. We are sinners saved by grace alone. Anyone who tries to tell you that you
are something better than you are is not your friend and they probably have an
agenda. Now, is a sinner saved by grace all we are? Definitely not. But that is
the place we all need to start, that is the starting line. How many think they
are running the race of faith, but they haven’t even begun because they have
been called up, but never called out in the love and truth of the Gospel?
They’ve been flattered with smooth words, slippery sermons, self-focused
messages, catchy book titles and quotable one-liners. We are meant to be iron
that sharpens iron; there is nothing smooth about that. Sometimes sparks fly
and if sparks never fly then maybe you are trying too hard to please man in
which case the Word says you cannot be a servant of Christ (Galatians 1:10).
Proverbs 6 & 7 warn of the adulteress woman and flattery
is often the first step to an adulterous affair. For Solomon to warn of such a
thing, the man who collected 700 wives, he ought to know.
Proverbs 7: 21 – with flattering lips she forced him… flattery is manipulative, coercive, forceful. Honestly, though, I wonder how many people realize that’s what they are doing most of the time or if they are consciously aware. Flattery is primarily about people’s motive and intention. We can’t read motive and intention. We may not always know we are being flattered and we may not even realize we are flattering someone. Ignorance doesn’t excuse flattery, but it does encourage a strong guard because it is something that can be so subtle and sly.
Sometimes people will say things they don’t mean just
because their own ears want to hear those same words said back to them. They
say ‘I love you’ because they want the other person to say it back. They want
to hear that they are loved, or they are smart, or they are appreciated or they
are good at something. That’s not a compliment. That’s not encouragement.
That’s flattery. It is selfish and insincere. You are manipulating and using
the other person to affirm yourself. In reality, if that is the motive of your
heart, affirmation is the last thing you need, you need healing and you need
correction. Sometimes when someone speaks to us we may feel an internal ‘tug’
to reply in kind. For instance, when someone says, ‘You look nice today,’ if we
feel the need, or if we feel compelled or obligated to ‘compliment’ them for
‘complimenting’ us, that is the subtle force behind flattery. It’s not
encouragement. It’s not a compliment. It’s not praise. It’s flattery. I think
so much of what is called ‘midwestern nice’ is flattery. “They said something
nice, now I have to say something nice”.
Proverbs 29:5 – Those who flatter their neighbors are
spreading nets for their feet.
What is the net that is set? What is the trap with flattery?
If you respond in kind to their flattery, then you have flattered. They caught
you. You have spoken insincerely. You have lied. You just did the same thing
they did. One way to tell if it is flattery is that flattery will often get
offended if you do not reply in kind. But love will not. In love, you don’t owe
me anything. You don’t owe me the same response. You don’t owe me
encouragement. We are instructed to encourage each other daily, but that doesn’t
mean we carry an entitled attitude about it and it doesn’t mean we become
offended if it doesn’t happen.
Flattery in Greek is the word: Kolakeia (kol-ak-i-eh)
[Strong's 2850]. It means: flattery with a view of advantage or gain. This
specific word only occurs once in the NT in
1 Thessalonians 2:5-6 - “For as you well know, we never
came with words of flattery nor with a pretext for greed – God is our witness,
nor did we seek glory and honor from people, neither from you nor from anyone
else, though as apostles of Christ, we had the power to assert our authority.”
AMP
It is important that this Greek word appears in a sentence
with the word greed because flattery is manipulative and the flatterer is
trying to get something from you. Even though this specific Greek word is only
used once, a similar meaning is implied in Jude verse 16
“These people are habitual murmurers, griping and
complaining, following their own desires controlled by passion, they speak
arrogantly, pretending to admire and flattering people to gain an advantage.”
AMP
In this context of Jude, he is speaking of the ungodly and
how they behave. However, what we need to be mindful of as those who are godly,
from an Ezekiel 18 perspective, is that if the godly do ungodly things long
enough, it can lead them to no longer be godly. The word admire in the Greek
means to marvel or wonder at, it can also mean the person is influenced by
partiality. But they are pretending. Their wonder, their regard, their
amazement and their partiality is all insincere. And so then the words, the
flattery that comes from their mouth is insincere. And the agenda is to gain a
personal advantage. They will puff you up as the most important person in the
room because then they become the one closest to the most important person in
the room. Or their reputation is improved because of their association with you
and your reputation. Or they will use their words to get words from you. And
this will continue. As long as you are a benefit to them and not a threat, as
long as you are useful to them and not challenging them, as long as you are
profitable to them and not questioning them, and as long as you feed their
flattery and don’t rebuke them, they will be loyal to you, but not because they
love you, not because they actually admire you, not because they actually have
regard or respect for you, but because they selfishly need you. And this is
exactly why Paul said that he NEVER did this in Thessalonica. As an Apostle of
Christ, I had authority, but that’s not how I played the cards because this is
such a bad representation. That is not what authority is for.
In Psalm 78:36-37 it reads, “Nevertheless, they flattered
Him with their mouths and lied to Him with their tongues. For their heart was
not steadfast toward Him, nor were they faithful to His covenant.” It
sounds similar to when Jesus said, “These people honor me with their mouths,
but their hearts are far from me. They worship me in vain…” (Matthew 15:8-9).
The fallen human nature will even attempt to flatter God if
left unchecked. Israel flattered God, they lied to Him. Flattery is a lie, it
is insincere speech, insincere praise, even insincere prayer. Do you know that
to take the Name of the Lord in vain is not just using His name as a cuss word?
It is not just saying, “Thus saith the Lord” when He did not say. To take His
name in vain is also praying in His name, through His name, but not believing
in His name. The only way to use His name is in reverence and in absolute
faith, any other way is vanity!
To think about this reference in Psalm 78, remember the
Hebrew word for flattery is ‘smooth’, so perhaps they were trying to smooth
things over with God after all their sin, saying smooth words, offering smooth
praises, saying smooth prayers. Nothing with true repentance, though. And if
you think of this in the terms you find in Jude 16, perhaps they were trying to
make room for themselves with God or trying to make God move in a direction
that they wanted Him to go. After all, we are his chosen people, there is a
benefit for us in this. He is useful to us. There is a personal advantage here.
He did deliver us from Egypt. He has done miracles for us. He is profitable to
us. So, we will pretend to admire Him, without actually loving Him. We will use
smooth words, we’ll use flattery, not to keep the relationship, but to
keep the benefits of the relationship because those are personally
advantageous for us.
James 3:16 – For where jealousy and selfish ambition
exist, there is disorder [unrest, rebellion] and every evil thing and every
morally degrading practice. AMP
This word selfish ambition in the Greek has a meaning of:
acting for one’s own gain, regardless of the strife or discord that it causes
(Strong's 2052). Your care is not for what the Lord deems as right or for the
good of other people. Your care is for your needs to be met, for you to have
what you want, and for your ego, pride or insecurity to be fed. So, when
selfish ambition is your drive, it makes room for every evil thing; it creates
space and provides opportunity for every morally degrading practice in your
life because when selfishness is your motive you will stop at nothing.
Matthew 12:33-37 - Either make the tree good and its
fruit good or make the tree bad and its fruit bad, for the tree is known by its
fruit. You brood of vipers! How can you speak good, when you are evil? For out
the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks. The good person out of his good
treasure brings forth good, and the evil person out of his evil treasure brings
forth evil. I tell you, on the day of judgment people will give account for
every careless word they speak, for by your words you will be justified, and by
your words you will be condemned.
Some translations say every idle word, but careless is a better definition for the Greek word that’s used. It’s a word you say without thinking, a word you say without meaning it. It’s a careless word, or even a lazy word, a word that doesn’t require effort to speak, or a word that just slips out. We are going to have to give an account for every word we have spoken. Not only that but we are justified or condemned by our words. More poignantly, our motive behind the word is what solidifies our justification or our condemnation. We can quote scripture, but if our motive is to cut the other person with it, we are not justified in that. Are we building someone up with praise because kind words are like honey, or because if they are in a good mood our day goes better? Condemned. It’s selfish, it’s flattery, it’s insincere and it makes room for every evil thing. You can add sarcasm in this conversation, too. Sarcasm is often insincere words at another’s expense, when you say one thing and mean another and it’s often in a hurtful or demeaning way. Jesus never spoke with sarcasm. This isn’t to say that you can’t be funny, or silly, or have lighthearted bantering or joking in your relationships, but it always goes back to motive.
Proverbs 27:19 – As in water face reflects face, so the
heart of a man reflects the man.
Our motives, intentions and heart represent who and where we really are. So much of what we’ve talked about today is not obvious and we often do not spend time thinking about what we are thinking about. Much of these things are subconscious and so we usually don’t recognize our motives until after the fact in hindsight. We can hear all of this and be tempted to feel like we haven’t done anything right. When we fail, we repent and when we know better, we do better, and we go from glory to glory with the Lord. There is only one way to really know and discern our motives.
Hebrews 4:12 – For the Word of God is alive and active
and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of
spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of
the heart.
The Word is our necessary tool to understanding even our
hidden, subconscious motives. It may be hidden in us, but there is nothing we
can hide from Him. When we allow ourselves to be washed with the water of the
Word, when we look into it as water, or as a mirror like James talks about, we
can behold what manner of man we really are. The Word tells us the truth about
who we really are in our fallen nature and who we really are in our new nature.
Isaiah 6:1-8 - In the year that King Uzziah died
I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up; and the
train of his robe filled the temple. Above him stood the seraphim.
Each had six wings: with two he covered his face, and with two he covered
his feet, and with two he flew. And one called to another and said: “Holy,
holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the whole earth is full of his
glory!” And the foundations of the thresholds shook at the voice of
him who called, and the house was filled with smoke. And I said: “Woe
is me! For I am lost; for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in
the midst of a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King,
the Lord of hosts!” Then one of the seraphim flew to me, having in
his hand a burning coal that he had taken with tongs from the altar. And
he touched my mouth and said: “Behold, this has touched your lips; your
guilt is taken away, and your sin atoned for.” And I heard the voice of the
Lord saying, "Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?" Then I
said, "Here I am ! Send me."
Isaiah has a vision and sees the Lord and the first and
only thing he can say is “I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell in the
midst of a people with unclean lips”! Seeing the Holy God made Him immediately
aware of one particular thing – his words and how unholy they often are. That’s
the area where he is first convicted in his life. It’s only after an encounter
with the Lord, only after the coal has touched his lips, that he is able to
volunteer himself to the Lord’s work, saying, “Here I am. Send me.” We cannot
be God’s mouthpiece when our mouths have not been cauterized. And if we try to,
we will end up like Israel in the book of Ezekiel, profaning His Name
everywhere we go. People may sincerely desire to be used by God, and honestly,
it’s not a bad desire and He can use us in spite of us any time He wishes.
However, I really believe there is a distinction between being used by God and
working with God. There are vessels for honor and vessels for dishonor. God used
Pharaoh; God used Judas.
But John 5:16-17 says, “For this reason the Jews
persecuted Him and sought to kill Him, because He had done these things on the
Sabbath. But Jesus answered them, “My Father has been working until now, and I
have been working.”
And in 1 Corinthians 15:58, it reads, “Therefore, my beloved brothers, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that in the Lord your labor is not in vain.”
So, anyone can be used by God. Indeed, everyone will be used
by God for one purpose or another. But to do the work of God requires a
relationship with God, an encounter with God, and a transformation of us
becoming more like God. For Isaiah, it began with his mouth. And remember when
the Holy Spirit was poured out upon the disciples in the upper room at
Pentecost, how did He appear? As a tongue. A tongue on fire as if it could have
been touched by a burning coal.
The Bible tells us that when we are born again God gives us a new heart (Ezekiel 36). But we are instructed to renew our minds (Romans 12). So, the heart is new, but the mind is not. So when Jesus said that, “Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks” (Matthew 12:34). That’s how it should be. Our words should come from our converted, saved, and new hearts. But how often do our words actually come from our unrenewed minds? How often do we speak our mind? How often do we give a piece of our mind? Again, only the Word can change this. Only the Word can cut, divide, and reveal our hidden motives. Only the Word can wash our minds and renew them. Only the Living Word can teach us how to speak and bring the conviction of the Holy Spirit.
John 1:1 – In the beginning was the Word. The Word was
with God and the Word was God.


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