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Monday, May 25, 2026

Verse of the Day for Monday, May 25, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 25, 2026

James 1:19

The Grace of a Listening Heart

“So, then, my beloved brothers, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, and slow to anger.”

The Word Before Us

There are few things more difficult, and few things more needed, than a heart that listens before it answers. James 1:19 speaks into the ordinary places where faith is tested: conversations at home, tensions within the church, moments of misunderstanding, and seasons when frustration rises before wisdom has time to speak. The verse is simple enough to remember, yet deep enough to shape a lifetime of discipleship. To be swift to hear, slow to speak, and slow to anger is not merely good manners. It is a way of yielding our impulses to God and allowing His grace to govern our responses.

Understanding the Context

The letter of James identifies its writer as “James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ,” and addresses “the twelve tribes which are in the Dispersion.” These believers were scattered, pressured, and learning how to live faithfully in difficult circumstances. James writes with a pastoral directness that joins belief and conduct together. He does not allow faith to remain only an inward confession; he shows how genuine faith becomes visible in endurance, humility, mercy, speech, obedience, and love.

James 1 begins by speaking of trials, endurance, wisdom, temptation, and the good gifts of God. In the verses surrounding James 1:19, the focus turns toward receiving the implanted word with humility and becoming doers of the word rather than hearers only. That setting matters. James is not simply offering advice for better communication, though the verse certainly helps us speak more wisely. He is showing what a receptive soul looks like before God. A person who is quick to listen is teachable. A person who is slow to speak makes room for discernment. A person who is slow to anger refuses to let human wrath pretend to accomplish the righteousness of God.

The verse also reminds us that Christian maturity often begins before words leave our mouths. The tongue can bless, wound, encourage, defend, accuse, comfort, or divide. James will return to this theme later in his letter when he writes about the power of the tongue. Here, he begins with the posture beneath our speech. Before the mouth is governed, the heart must be humbled. Before anger is restrained, the soul must learn to pause before God.

Living the Verse Today

In daily life, James 1:19 invites us to practice a slower, more prayerful way of responding. Many of our regrets begin with words spoken too quickly. We answer before we understand. We defend before we listen. We react before we pray. James calls us to another path, one shaped by patience and humility. Being swift to hear does not mean we accept everything uncritically, nor does it mean we avoid truth. It means we honor God and our neighbor enough to listen carefully before we speak.

To be slow to speak is not silence born of fear. It is restraint born of wisdom. There are times when love requires honest words, but love also teaches us to choose those words carefully. A gentle pause can keep a hard conversation from becoming a harmful one. A moment of prayer can turn a defensive reply into a faithful response. A listening heart can hear not only what another person says, but also the hurt, confusion, fear, or longing beneath the words.

James also tells us to be slow to anger. Anger is not always false, but it is often dangerous when it becomes quick, careless, or self-protective. The anger that rises from wounded pride rarely leads us toward righteousness. The anger that refuses to listen can easily damage the very relationships God calls us to nurture. In Christ, we are invited to bring our frustration under the rule of grace, trusting that God is strong enough to defend what is right without requiring us to speak rashly or harshly.

This verse is especially important in family life, church life, and Christian witness. The world has no shortage of quick opinions and sharp replies. The people of God are called to bear witness to another kingdom, one where truth and love are not enemies, where patience is not weakness, and where listening can become an act of holy care. When we slow down long enough to hear, we make room for mercy. When we slow down before speaking, we make room for wisdom. When we slow down before anger takes hold, we make room for the Spirit to shape our response.

Reflection

Where in my life is God inviting me to listen more carefully, speak more prayerfully, and surrender my anger more fully to His grace?


Watch for my upcoming devotional book, The Word Before Us, a two-volume collection of Verse of the Day reflections that will soon be available from Amazon. Each entry opens the Scriptures with warmth, reverence, and practical insight, helping readers understand the context of God’s Word and apply its truth to daily life. Written in a pastoral and accessible style, these devotionals invite readers to slow down, listen for the voice of God in Scripture, and walk more faithfully in the grace, hope, and wisdom of Christ.


The Bible texts are from the World English Bible (WEB), which is a Public Domain Modern English translation of the Holy Bible. The World English Bible is based on the American Standard Version (ASV) of the Holy Bible, first published in 1901, the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia Old Testament, and the Greek Majority Text New Testament. It is in draft form and is currently being edited for accuracy and readability. Verse of the Day is a daily inspirational and encouraging Bible verse, extracted from BibleGateway.com. Commentary by Kenny Sallee, ThM. All rights reserved.

Daily Devotions for Monday, May 25, 2026: Remembering with Hope

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The Daily Devotional

Monday, May 25, 2026

Remembering with Hope

“Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.” John 15:13

Reflection

Memorial Day invites us to pause before we rush into summer. For many, it arrives with the scent of barbecue, the promise of travel, and the beginning of a new season. Yet beneath the long weekend is a solemn call to remember. It is a day set apart to honor those who gave their lives in military service, those whose names are carved into stone, spoken with tears, carried in family stories, and remembered in quiet places where flags move gently in the wind.

John 15:13 gives us words deep enough for such a day: “Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.” Jesus spoke these words to His disciples on the night before His crucifixion. He was not speaking about love as a passing emotion or a sentimental idea. He was speaking of love that gives, love that suffers, love that holds nothing back. He was preparing His friends to understand the cross, where He would lay down His life not only for those who understood Him, but for sinners, doubters, wanderers, enemies, and the wounded world He came to redeem.

On Memorial Day, we stand carefully and reverently before the reality of sacrifice. We do not glorify death. We do not pretend that grief is simple. We do not reduce the cost of service to a phrase or a ceremony. We remember that behind every flag, every folded uniform, every engraved name, there was a person. Someone had a mother, father, wife, husband, child, friend, hometown, hopes, fears, and unfinished plans. Someone left a chair empty at the table. Someone’s laughter became a memory. Someone’s life was given in service to others.

There is a sacred kind of quiet in a cemetery on Memorial Day. You may see small flags placed beside headstones, each one marking a story known fully only to God. A person may walk slowly from grave to grave, brushing dust from a name, straightening a flower, or standing silently because words are not enough. Sometimes the most faithful act is simply to stand there and remember. Not to explain everything. Not to rush past sorrow. Not to hide from the weight of love and loss. Just to remember.

That kind of remembrance can become a holy act. It teaches gratitude without pride. It teaches humility without despair. It reminds us that the freedoms and blessings we often take for granted have come at a cost. It also reminds us that God is near to those who mourn. Scripture does not ask us to forget our grief in order to have faith. Rather, it teaches us to bring our grief into the presence of the One who remembers every name, sees every tear, and holds every life in His eternal care.

Jesus’ words in John 15:13 point us toward the highest form of love: self-giving love. When we honor those who laid down their lives for others, we are not saying that every human sacrifice is the same as Christ’s sacrifice. The cross stands alone. Jesus gave His life freely, fully, and redemptively for the salvation of the world. Yet every act of true self-giving love reflects, in some small way, the pattern of His heart. Where love gives itself for the sake of another, we see an echo of the greater love revealed in Christ.

This day also gives us a practical calling. We can remember with gratitude by speaking names, listening to stories, visiting graves, praying for grieving families, or simply pausing before the day’s activities to acknowledge the cost carried by others. We can live with humility by refusing to treat life lightly. We can honor sacrifice by becoming people of peace, mercy, service, and compassion in the places God has put us. Remembrance should not end with a moment of silence. It should shape the way we live after the silence is over.

Perhaps today’s challenge is simple: pause before God and remember. Remember those who gave their lives. Remember those who still grieve. Remember that love is more than words. Then ask the Lord to make your own life more generous, more faithful, and more willing to serve. Not all are called to lay down their lives in the same way, but every Christian is called to lay down selfishness, pride, bitterness, indifference, and fear. Every day gives us a chance to love in costly, humble, Christ-shaped ways.

Memorial Day holds grief and gratitude together. It asks us to look back with honor and look forward with hope. Our hope is not in human strength, nor in our ability to preserve every memory perfectly. Our hope is in the God who remembers. Our hope is in Christ, who laid down His life and took it up again. Because of Him, sacrifice is not forgotten, grief is not final, and love is never wasted.

Prayer

Gracious and eternal God, on this Memorial Day, we pause in remembrance of those who gave their lives in service to others, and we entrust their names, their stories, and their families to Your loving care. Teach us to remember with gratitude, to grieve with compassion, and to live with humility before the cost borne by others. Comfort all who carry an empty chair, a folded flag, or a sorrow that still speaks. Shape our hearts in the likeness of Christ, whose greater love was revealed on the cross, and help us carry hope, mercy, and peace into this day and every day. Amen.


Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA

The Bible texts are from the World English Bible (WEB), which is a Public Domain Modern English translation of the Holy Bible. The World English Bible is based on the American Standard Version (ASV) of the Holy Bible, first published in 1901, the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia Old Testament, and the Greek Majority Text New Testament. It is in draft form and is currently being edited for accuracy and readability. All rights reserved.