Proverbs 27:14 ¶ He that blesseth his friend with a loud
voice, rising early in the morning, it shall be counted a curse to him.
At first I saw this as very clearly a simple
Proverb about how even something that you normally would love to hear, like
approval and a blessing from a friend, could be a real nuisance if done
excessively or at the wrong time. For instance, you wouldn’t care to have your
friend call you on the telephone early in the morning, waking you up, to tell
you how wonderful you are. In fact, you’d eventually look on that person as a
pain in the neck or mentally unbalanced. In other words, your approval can
become a curse rather than a blessing by being given excessively and at
inopportune times.
The commentators talk about, as the earlier
Proverb about “open rebuke” being better than “secret love” so does excessive
verbal blessing eventually become meaningless and annoying. So, when does a
blessing become a curse?
Proverbs 26:28 A lying tongue hateth those
that are afflicted by it; and a flattering mouth worketh ruin.
When blessing becomes flattery and someone is
tempted to believe the excess coming from a friend’s mouth it can lead to a
higher view of oneself than is warranted and then the ruin that can follow from
pride. Christians are told;
Romans 12:3 For I say, through the grace
given unto me, to every man that is among you, not to think of himself more
highly than he ought to think; but to think soberly, according as God hath
dealt to every man the measure of faith.
And the warnings given in Proverbs are abundant
about not thinking too highly of yourself;
Proverbs 16:18 ¶ Pride goeth before
destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall. 19 ¶ Better it is to be of an
humble spirit with the lowly, than to divide the spoil with the proud.
Proverbs 25:27 ¶ It is not good to eat much honey: so for men to search their
own glory is not glory.
Proverbs 26:12 ¶ Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? there is more hope
of a fool than of him.
This Proverb is a particular problem for a child. You may
have a gifted child or a child who seems very intelligent emotionally. You want
them to have all the opportunities to excel, to take their natural abilities
and rise high with them. But, be careful about excessive praise. Give them a
chance to prove themselves by their behavior and actions rather than just their
potential.
When I was a child I was bookish and an avid
reader. I could retain information and loved to talk about what I’d read.
Certain members of my family had far too high an opinion of my potential and
not enough sober realization of my limitations. As a result of these errors in
judgment I was pushed too far too fast for my actual abilities. By skipping
parts of grades and being placed in “gifted” groups and “honors” courses when I
really didn’t have the actual ability to match the demands placed on me my
emotional growth was harmed, my maturity was stifled, and I suffered a great
deal.
Let me put it another way about how we live
through our kids. We don’t let kids play sandlot baseball anymore. We want them
to play on organized teams hoping that they’ll one day be professional
superstars. We don’t just hope that our child will be able to handle college or
trade school and get a decent job so he or she can support himself. As soon as
we realize our child is bright we begin dreaming of them being a great doctor
or lawyer, being famous and important. We push and push our children and heap
praise after praise on them. I remember a friend in college who committed
suicide. He had gone to college at only 16 years old, gifted beyond his years.
His name was Shelton Darity. Such a nice kid. One day he drank a deadly poison
whose name I can’t remember and was found in his cubicle at the math building I
believe. The note he left said, “There’s nothing wrong. I’m just tired.” He
always talked about the high hopes his family had for him and how he just
wanted to live a normal life. But, when I went down to talk to the campus
police with others who knew him, stunned and grieving, all they talked about
was his great promise and the waste of his death. None of us really considered
that he had been pushed too far, praised too much, and not afforded the right
to just be a person.
Now, Shelton was a genius and I wasn’t so I’m
not making a comparison that way. My point is that flattery, excessive
approval, praise, and blessing is not necessarily a good thing. It can lead to
pride or it can lead to despair, fearing that you can’t measure up to what’s
expected of you.
I remember someone who used to be a preacher
writing, and I can’t remember where it was or who said it, but it was someone
who seemed to be gifted at speaking and putting the Bible in context but
everyone “wanted a piece of him” and eventually he could not take the pressure
to be perfect, to always have the next sermon be more brilliant than any
previous, to be terrified of making a mistake or having people pick apart his
moral failings, no matter how small. He finally gave up the ministry because he
just came to believe that he would eventually let everyone down.
Many preachers and teachers have dealt with the
excessive praise and blessing that becomes a curse because it is accompanied by
expectations that are unreasonable and unfair. I am reminded again of the
gifted child having scholarships and praise heaped upon him but not being
allowed to learn and grow like a normal human being and being expected to be
perfect.
So, in this respect, try to think of this
Proverb the next time your child scores the home run, the touchdown, or aces
the big exam, and someone tells you how they’re going to go far and should look
into this or that school or program for the gifted. Be very careful about how
much praise you heap on them, rising early in the morning with a loud voice.
Your blessings may become a curse.

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