Are you offended by bad language? By Brendan Conboy
Bad language, colourful language, swearing, profanity? Are they necessary? Mark Twain famously viewed profanity as a necessary relief, arguing it provided comfort "denied even to prayer" during trying times. He regarded it as essential, jokingly stating it was "more necessary to me than is immunity from colds", and maintained that one could still be a gentleman while swearing if done "affectionately." George Washington, the first President of America, famously condemned "the foolish and wicked practice of profane cursing and swearing" in a 1776 general order to his officers, calling it a "vice so mean and low" that it detests all sense of character. Whilst the Apostle Paul frequently condemns "filthy language" and "corrupting talk" (e.g., Ephesians 4:29, Colossians 3:8), urging Christians to use words that build up rather than tear down. I know that this subject has been raised before, and I am sure that it w...