6 min 9 mths

๐Ÿ“… 16.07.2025
๐ŸŒŸ The Gift of Words
๐Ÿงญ Words that Build or Destroy Life

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๐Ÿ“– Bible Verse

โ€œKeep your tongue from evil and your lips from telling lies.โ€
โ€“ Psalm 34:13

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๐Ÿ‘ฃ Introduction

We all talk โ€“ all day long. At breakfast, at school, on WhatsApp, Insta, Snapchat, Discord, or just hanging out with friends.
Our words often just come out โ€“ without much thought.

But letโ€™s be honest:
How many times have you said something and immediately thought, โ€œOh no, I really shouldnโ€™t have said thatโ€?
Or: How many times has someoneโ€™s sentence hurt you deeply โ€“ even if they didnโ€™t mean it that way?

Words arenโ€™t just harmless airwaves. They carry power.
They can build people up โ€“ or tear them down.
They can give courage โ€“ or really wound.

God gave us the gift of speech โ€“ a real gift. And today we want to take a closer, honest look:
๐Ÿ‘‰ How do we actually use this gift?
๐Ÿ‘‰ And how can we learn to use our words to bless instead of hurt?

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๐ŸŽฏ Devotional

Words can comfort, heal, and bring hope โ€“ but also destroy, wound, and divide.
David writes in Psalm 34:13 a clear instruction: โ€œKeep your tongue from evil.โ€ Why is that so important?

Ellen White writes in The Adventist Home, p. 435:

โ€œThe words we speak have a power far greater than we understand. They are an influence that continues like ripples on water.โ€

Our words are like seeds: they produce fruit โ€“ good or bad. And every one of us sows daily.
A hurtful word can be like poison that lingers. A kind word can be like healing medicine.

Jesus Himself says in Matthew 12:36:

โ€œI tell you that everyone will have to give account on the day of judgment for every empty word they have spoken.โ€

That sounds serious โ€“ and it is.

๐Ÿ’ฌ So what does it mean to keep your tongue?
It doesnโ€™t mean staying silent. It means speaking intentionally โ€“ with kindness, honesty, and love.

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๐Ÿ“ Story โ€“ The Scars of the Nails

There was once a boy named Elias. He had a problem many teenagers face: he was impulsive and often spoke without thinking. His words were fast, sharp โ€“ and sometimes hurtful.

His father, a quiet, wise man, watched this with concern. One day, he gave Elias a bag full of nails and a hammer.

โ€œEvery time you hurt someone with your words โ€“ whether on purpose or not โ€“ go to the garden and hammer a nail into the old wooden fence behind the house.โ€

Elias was confused but obeyed. On the first day alone, he hammered in 37 nails.
The following days, it was still many โ€“ but slowly, the number dropped. Elias started to realize how damaging his words could be.
He began trying harder to speak calmly and think before speaking.

After a few weeks, he proudly said to his father:

โ€œDad, today I didnโ€™t hammer in a single nail! I think Iโ€™ve learned to control my tongue!โ€

His father nodded. Then he said:

โ€œVery good. Now, for every day you donโ€™t hurt anyone, pull out one nail.โ€

Elias did as instructed. It took weeks, but eventually, the fence was nail-free.

But then his father led him to the fence and said with a serious voice:

โ€œLook at this fence. The nails are gone โ€“ but see the holes that remain?
Those are the scars of your words.
You can remove the nail โ€“ you can apologize โ€“ but sometimes the wound remains in the heart.โ€

Elias lowered his head. In that moment, he understood:
Words leave marks.

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๐Ÿ’ญ What can we learn from this story?

Itโ€™s not enough to just stop talking โ€“ we need to learn how to speak wisely.

A hurtful word cannot be “taken back.” Even an apology doesnโ€™t erase every trace.

Thatโ€™s why itโ€™s so important to โ€œkeep your tongue,โ€ as Psalm 34:13 says.

๐Ÿ’ฌ Ellen White confirms this truth:

โ€œA careless word may wound a heart and discourage a soul. But a loving word can bring comfort where hope seems gone.โ€
โ€“ Christโ€™s Object Lessons, p. 336

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๐Ÿง  Reflection โ€“ What does this mean for you?

Think back for a moment: What was the last thing you said โ€“ this morning, at school, during an argument?
Did it build someone up โ€“ or tear someone down?

God calls us to speak blessing, not cursing.
He wants our words to show others that Jesus lives in us.
Ellen White says:

โ€œThe tongue that is under Christโ€™s control will speak gentle, healing words, spread peace, and be a light in the darkness.โ€
โ€“ The Ministry of Healing, p. 491

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๐Ÿ’ก Todayโ€™s Reflections

Before you speak, ask yourself: Is it true? Is it necessary? Is it kind?

Choose to encourage someone today with your words.

If youโ€™ve hurt someone: Be brave and ask for forgiveness.

Ask God to help you guard your tongue โ€“ especially in challenging moments.

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๐Ÿ™ Prayer

Heavenly Father,
You gave me the gift of speech โ€“ and with it, responsibility.
Help me choose my words wisely. Let my tongue speak not evil,
but truth, hope, and love.
Remind me daily that words have power โ€“
and that through my speech, I can show that You live in me.
Give me a pure heart, so that my words will also be pure.
In Jesusโ€™ name, Amen.

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๐Ÿงƒ Takeaway Thought for Today

โ€œWords are like seeds โ€“ be mindful of what you sow.โ€

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