"What a pity we cannot curse and swear in good society! Cannot the stinging dialect of the sailors be domesticated? It is the best rhetoric, and for a hundred occasions those forbidden words are the only good ones." -Ralph Waldo Emerson
I wrote this in response to Mr. Oak's recent article Cursing: Where should Christians draw the line?
Your quote from Mr. Pine seems to assume that all Christians should say nice things all the time. I believe this misses an important aspect of Christian life that demands that, sometimes, we have to say mean shit. Sometimes we have to say mean shit in service to the Kingdom, especially to the religious.
If we look at the Scriptures, the apostles didn't say nice things all the time (they actually say a lot of mean and blunt things). It's not even how Jesus acted! Jesus called the Pharisees a "brood of vipers" which is roughly equivalent, in our culture, to calling someone a "son of a bitch". Both are common insults in their respective cultures that were considered very rude.
Again, we have in Phillippians the word "skubula" used by Paul to describe the worth of his previous Pharasaical practices. Based on my study of the word, I would translate the word as "bullshit." This word study seems to place the naughtiness of the word somewhere between "crap" and "shit". Regardless of one's translation, it seems hermeneutically necessary that one acknowledges that Paul used a cuss word. And not just in daily life, in his epistle to a church.
Basically, in answer to the question posed by the title of your post, Christians should cuss. Paul did it, Augustine did it, Luther did it, Lewis did it, and that's how I'm gonna do it! Haha.
If you look at our faith's history, I believe it is relatively apparent that Evangelical Christianity's aversion to cussing is an effect of the Holiness Movement/Fundamentalist Movement which sought to set Christians apart from "the world". While I don't doubt their noble intentions, we have taken it to the point that we refuse to eat with sinners (or, rather, speak their vernacular) and could use a few Pauls to pull our Peters aside, look 'em in the eyes, and ask them, "WTF?"
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