Name: Oneil McQuick
Date: June 12,
2004|
Subject Asked: Is honesty the best policy? Are
there situations I which withholding the truth or lying, “the best
thing to do?” Explain.
How Done:
In class writing, journal.
School: BCC, ENC 1101
It is the best policy and should always strive to be upheld.
Another cliché says, “cost it what it wills.” Meaning, regardless
of what adverse effect the truth may bring tell it anyway, for
lying always catches up with itself. Moreover, God hates a person
who loves and makes a life (Rev 22:15); a person who
continues to lie for everything – to buy, to pass, to get ahead,
to do everything.
However, they may be circumstances that lying is inevitable.
For instance, the preservation of the baby Moses, his mother and
sister lied verbally and in action. They had to do so, that Moses
might live, or he would have been beheaded like all the other
babies in Goshen. If this didn’t occur, we wouldn’t have the
Judeo-Christian faith and the blessed nation to which God choose
to enflesh himself in as The Christ. Therefore, lying is sort of
warranted in certain cases. To determine them might be
difficult.
Here in we have two types of liars, one that “lieth” or
make a lifestyle of lying - continue to do it blatantly with no
fear of God. Two, there is another liar who doesn’t “lieth”
but has to lie in a “Moses mother/sister situation;” except in
denying Christ for evading death - they fear God and watch their
words and even when a “Moses mother/sister situation” comes about,
they are temporarily constrained by conscience and even go in
“repentance” over what would be nothing to an ardent liar. When
God spoke that “all liars have their part in the lake of fire,” it
refers to all who are categories in the first group –
lieth. Moreover, those who are justified (saved) not only
cannot make a lifestyle of lying, but also cannot be partakers in
the lake of fire; they are justified, all sins are washed away.
Therefore, God told the justified, “every tongue that shall rise
against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn” (Isaiah 54:17).
Note: “th” is bold in
“lieth” because when “th” is applied to a verse in the scripture
it means a continuance in a thing. For instance, ‘partaketh’,
means that he partook once and continue to do so. Similar to how
we use s at the end of a word. For instance, you wouldn’t say,
“She sing,” that implies she just sang and that’s it. But “she
sings,” implies she just sang and is singing or always will sing
on the choir.