Reporting is hard
business. It takes a disciplined mind. It's hard to be objective. A good
reporter must divorce himself from all his pre-suppositions, prejudices,
pre-conceived notions. He has the responsibility to his readers or viewers
to report facts as best as he can determine them. He has no business
reporting hearsay, opinion, or other part-truths unless he identifies them
as such. It takes concentration and a high regard for truth.
Distributing any truth
requires the same integrity as that which is necessary for the good
journalist. It, too, calls for intense concentration, an unbiased mind, a
desire not only to know the truth, but to use it for good whenever and
wherever possible. No person has the right to distribute untruth, hearsay,
gossip.
The Scriptures assign
an attitude for those who would dare speak of things to others publicly. For
instance, ``If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of God''
(1
Pet. 4:11),
addresses the tendencies to report opinions and is God's warning against
such. ``There is a time to keep silence, and a time to speak''
(Eccles. 3:7)
speaks to the tendency to want to speak more than the occasion calls for, a
constant problem for all of us it seems. ``But speak thou the things which
become sound doctrine'' (Titus
2:1) calls to
mind the necessity of adorning the doctrine of Christ with a disposition
toward correctness, making sure that you do not speak opinion or promote
your own surmisings.
The Scriptures also
warns about speaking things to others privately as well. ``Let your speech
be always with grace, seasoned with salt''
(Titus 2:8)
reminds us to make sure that our speech has just the right flavor, that we
make sure we do our best to say palatable things in every situation. ``A
fool is full of words,'' says the wise man
(Eccles. 10:14),
indicating that you become suspicious when you say too much about a thing.
``A soft answer turneth away wrath: but grievous words stir up anger''
(Prov. 15:1)
tells us about how to handle controversial matters and is a passage everyone
would do well to commit to memory.
Then there are those
private reporters, those who speak in hushed tones and report in secret,
those who seemingly take great delight in spreading rumors and other hurtful
information. A Gossip is a newsmonger, one who carries about information
that is mostly undocumented in nature and unproductive in effect. It is
speech which is seldom intended to edify and will usually include such
things as idle talk, tattling, rumors. Sadly, most everyone has participated
in it at one time or the other. And even more sadly, many have done so with
full knowledge of what they were doing.
``Behold how great a
matter a little fire kindleth!''
(Jas. 3:5).
It
takes only a small amount of kindling to start a huge conflagration and the
skilled gossip knows just how to do it. He may just lift an eyebrow or crook
his mouth. He may offer some innuendo or half-truth. He may start some
rumor in a place where he knows it will spread like wildfire. He may write
something without confirming the source or examining all the facts just
because the rumor he is reporting fits what he wants to report.
Gossip is ugly. Gossip
is sinful. But gossip is effective, too. ``Dead flies cause the ointment of
the apothecary to send forth a stinking savor; so doth a little folly him
that is in reputation for wisdom and honor''
(Eccles. 10:1).
A man's reputation, which may have taken years to build, can be destroyed by
one little, well-placed rumor, just as the ointment which may have taken
months to prepare can be destroyed when one little stink-fly lands in the
potion. It is a serious thing to report information which is not true or
pass along what has never been proven. But people do it all the time. And
get away with it.
Two things would help.
Don't repeat anything
you don't know for sure. The world of gossip operates on a chain reaction.
When the chain is broken, the gossip stops.
Remember you are
responsible for what you tell. No matter where you got it, it's still your
responsibility. Just don't re-tell and you won't have to worry about it.
Make sure it needs to be told before you tell it.