“How great a forest is set ablaze by a small fire! And the tongue is a fire.”
After this quote from Christian scriptures (James 3:5), Marilynne Robinson continues an essay on “Slander” in her book, What Are We Doing Here?
Both Christian and Hebrew scriptures emphasize the power of the tongue to harm. Robinson writes: “ . . malicious speech ranks among the gravest transgressions.” As an example of grievous harm by slanderers, she points out the slurs against Jews during the Middle Ages, paving the way for the Holocaust centuries later.
It’s not surprising that Robinson calls many of the stories circulating on the internet a modern version of slander.
Two final quotes from Robinson’s book:
“Many people now think in terms of a Manichaean struggle between secularism and all we hold dear. On these grounds they have launched an attack on American civil society, formally a famous strength, which they see as secular because it is nonsectarian. . .
“If we are to continue as a democracy, we must find a way to stabilize the language and temper of our debates and disputes.”