Godbreathed: What It Really Means for the Bible to Be Divinely Inspired by Zack Hunt
				
							 
							
								
							
							
							Author:Zack Hunt
							
							
							
							Language: eng
							
							
							
							Format: epub
							
							
							
																				
							
							
							
							
							
							Publisher: MennoMedia
							
							
							
							Published: 2023-03-06T00:00:00+00:00
							
							
							
							
							
							
5
Cussinâ for Jesus
I started cussing at a very young age. I wasnât brought up to cuss. Swear words werenât a part of my familyâs vocabulary, at least not that I was aware of. We were holiness people, and holiness people didnât cuss. But kids at school did. Not in class, obviously, but definitely on the playground or whenever teachers werenât around, and they could impress everyone in class with their adult vocabulary. As soon as they did, I followed right along. Not in front of anyone, of course. Even as a first grader I had a holiness reputation to maintain. But as soon as I stepped off the bus and saw it drive far enough away that I knew the bus driver couldnât hear me and rat me out to my mom later, I would scream whatever new cussword I had learned that day at school at the top of my lungs.1
I was a weird kid. As I got older, I didnât really get any less weird. I was a good evangelical teenager, which meant cussing was forbidden, or at least reserved for only when I needed to look cool in front of the right people. Instead of actual profanity, I used evangelical profanity. What was evangelical profanity? A laundry list of words that sounded almost like actual profanity, but werenât technically cuss words, so we could feel sure we werenât going to hell for letting unwholesome language come out of our mouths. Words like âheck, âson of a biscuit,â âshut the front door,â âfrickinââ and literally just saying the word âbleepâ (as in âWhat the bleep?â) were just a handful of the many entries in our lexicon of evangelical profanity.
You can imagine, then, the feeling of unbridled jubilation I had when I discovered there is genuine, bona fide profanity in the Bible. Itâs true. Not in our English translations, obviously. That would be too scandalous and profane. But itâs there in the original Greek. In his letter to the Philippians, Paul writes, âI regard everything as loss because of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things, and I regard them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christâ (Philippians 3:8). That bit about rubbish? Itâs a sanitized translation of the Greek word skubalon. The unsanitized, more literal translation would be âsh**.â I genuinely find ârubbishâ a poor translation decision because, in sanitizing the word, we lose just how passionate Paul was about the gospel. Alas, no one asked for my opinion during the translation process.
Regardless of translation or tradition, there is simply no place for the profane in our sacred spaces. Whatever its form, the profane is an unwelcome interloper that defiles the holy, rendering it debased, impure, unworthy, and obscene. As a people called to holiness, to standing apart from the rest of the world as a city on a hill, a light in the darkness, or whatever biblical metaphor you prefer, we Christians
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