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The Tongue Is a Restless Evil

Cover of In the Hour of Silence

Today's Devotional

A gentle tongue is a tree of life —Proverbs 15:4 (ESV).

How many are the sins of the tongue—how many, and how deadly! From anger, from slander, from folly, from untruthfulness, from untender judgments, from impure and defiling speech, good Lord, deliver me.

There is, St. Paul says, a foolish talking which is not convenient (Ephesians 5:4).  My conversation may be insipid, vain, unprofitable, trivial, and idle. It may do no good to anyone. 1t may kindle no consoling, strengthening, inspiring thought. It is not seasoned with the salt of grace. It has not the earnestness and the spiritual quality which befit the Christian.

There is, St. Paul says again, a filthy communication which should never proceed from a disciple’s mouth (Colossians 3:8). It ministers to wantonness. It is suggestive of what is evil and unholy. It paints sin in gay and brilliant and enticing colors, so that its real ugliness is not recognized. All such speech I must abhor. I must not listen to it in others, nor tolerate it in myself.

There is, St. Paul says once more, a jesting which is not becoming in the believer and the saint (Ephesians 5:4). In whatever pleasantry and humor I may allow myself, I must ever be refined, noble-hearted, tender. There is a persiflage [light and slightly contemptuous mockery or banter], a wit, a banter, a sarcasm, which is neither high-minded nor kind. It is enlisted in the service of sin and not in that of Christ.

My Lord, help me to-day to set a watch over my lips, that I do not offend against you with my tongue. The purest speech will need much purifying before it can join in the praises of your temple on high. For that worship I would tune my voice now, by the tones of prayer, by the defense of the right, by the accents of love.

About the author and the source

It is for his book Men of the Covenant (the story of the martyred Scottish Covenanters) that Alexander Smellie (1857–1923) is remembered today. Nonetheless, his devotional Hour of Silence was so popular in its own day it had to be reprinted eight times in twenty-four years. He was a pastor in the Free Church of Scotland and an editor and contributor to Christian magazines

Alexander Smellie. In the Hour of Silence: A Book of Daily Meditations for a Year. London: Andrew Melrose, 1899.

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