Wednesday 24 June 2015

OUR DAILY BREAD

What's In Your Mouth?
Psalm 126

Communications experts tell us that the average person speaks enough to fill 20 single-spaced, typed pages every day. This means our mouths crank out enough words to fill 2 books of 300 pages each month, 24 books each year, and 1,200 books in 50 years of speaking. Thanks to telephones, voice-mail, cellphones, and conversations our words comprise a large part of our lives, so the kinds of words we use are important.

The psalmist’s mouth was filled with words of praise to God when he wrote Psalm 126. The Lord had done great things for him and his people, and even the nations around them noticed (v.2). Remembering God’s past blessings, he said their “mouth was filled with laughter, and their tongue with singing.” What words would you have used in verse 3 had you been writing this psalm? So often, our attitude may seem to be: “The Lord has done great things for me, and I... can’t recall any of them right now.
. . . am wondering what He’ll do for me next. . . . need much more.”

Or can you finish it by saying, “And I am praising and thanking Him for His goodness”? As you recall God’s blessings today, express your words of praise to Him. —Anne Cetas

When my thoughts and the Word
Are in one accord,
Then the words of my mouth
Honor Christ my Lord. —Hess

The words of my mouth are the product of my thoughts.

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