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Friday, May 8, 2026

Verse of the Day for Friday, May 8, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 8th

Colossians 4:5-6

Grace for Every Conversation

“Walk in wisdom toward those who are outside, redeeming the time. Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may know how you ought to answer each one.”

The Word Before Us

The Christian life is not only seen in worship, prayer, and private devotion. It is also revealed in the ordinary conversations, quiet responses, difficult moments, and daily encounters we have with others. Colossians 4:5-6 reminds us that our words and actions carry weight. They may open a door, soften a heart, repair a wound, or bear witness to Christ in ways we may never fully see.

Paul calls believers to walk wisely and speak graciously. This wisdom is not cleverness, argument, or religious performance. It is the steady discernment that comes from belonging to Christ. Grace-filled speech does not mean weak speech or empty politeness. It means words shaped by the mercy we have received from God. Our speech is to be “seasoned with salt,” carrying both truth and kindness, preservation and flavor, conviction and gentleness.

Understanding the Context

The Apostle Paul is writing to the Christians in Colossae, a church he had not personally founded but deeply cared about. The letter to the Colossians centers on the supremacy and sufficiency of Christ. Paul reminds them that Jesus is the image of the invisible God, the head of the church, and the One in whom all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell.

Near the end of the letter, Paul turns to practical instruction. After urging believers to set their minds on things above, put away the old life, clothe themselves with compassion, and devote themselves to prayer, he speaks about how they are to live before those outside the Christian community. The phrase “those who are outside” refers to people who do not yet share their faith in Christ. Paul is not encouraging fear, withdrawal, or judgment. He is teaching the church to live with spiritual attentiveness and gracious witness.

This context matters because Paul connects the believer’s public life with prayer, conduct, and speech. Just before these verses, he asks the Colossians to pray that God would open a door for the word. Then he tells them to walk in wisdom and speak with grace. In other words, evangelistic witness is not only found in formal preaching. It is also found in the way Christians live, listen, answer, and speak in daily life.

Living the Verse Today

Colossians 4:5-6 invites us to pay attention to the witness of our ordinary lives. Every day brings moments when we interact with neighbors, family members, strangers, coworkers, church members, and people who may be carrying burdens we cannot see. In those moments, wisdom asks, “How can I represent Christ faithfully here?” Grace asks, “How can my words reflect the mercy of God rather than the impatience of my own heart?”

To “redeem the time” is to treat our opportunities as sacred. It does not mean we must force every conversation into a sermon. It means we are awake to the possibility that God may use even a brief exchange for His purposes. A patient answer, a gentle correction, an honest apology, a quiet encouragement, or a restrained response can become part of our faithful witness.

This verse also calls us to examine the condition of our speech. Words can heal, but they can also wound. Words can invite, but they can also drive people away. Paul does not tell believers to choose between truth and grace. He calls them to both. Speech seasoned with salt has substance. It does not flatter, manipulate, or avoid what is right. Yet it is also gracious, because the one speaking remembers how much grace they themselves have received.

For the Christian, this begins with the heart before it reaches the tongue. We cannot consistently speak with grace if we are not living from grace. Prayer slows us down. Scripture reshapes our instincts. Repentance softens our pride. Love teaches us to see the person before us not as an opponent to defeat, but as someone made in the image of God.

Today, we may ask the Lord to make our presence wiser and our speech gentler. We may ask Him to help us recognize open doors without forcing them, to answer honestly without harshness, and to speak in a way that carries the fragrance of Christ. In a world often marked by careless words and quick reactions, gracious speech can become a quiet act of discipleship.

Reflection

Where is God inviting me to speak with greater wisdom, grace, and spiritual attentiveness today?


The Bible texts are from the 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 Stutgartensa 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 Friday, May 8, 2026: When the Bells Finally Rang

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The Daily Devotional

Friday, May 8, 2026

When the Bells Finally Rang

“He makes wars cease to the end of the earth; he breaks the bow, and shatters the spear; he burns the shields with fire.” — Psalm 46:9

Reflection

On May 8, 1945, bells rang across much of the world. Streets filled with people who had waited through years of darkness, rationing, separation, bombing raids, telegrams, battlefield reports, and terrible uncertainty. Victory in Europe Day—V-E Day—marked the moment when Germany’s unconditional surrender officially took effect, bringing World War II in Europe to an end. For many, it was a day of relief so deep that words could hardly hold it. People sang, danced, prayed, embraced strangers, waved flags, and wept.

Yet the joy of that day was not simple. It was not the carefree joy of people untouched by sorrow. It was the trembling joy of those who had survived something immense. Many who heard the bells also carried the names of the dead in their hearts. Empty chairs remained at kitchen tables. Cities lay in ruins. Refugees still searched for home. Veterans carried wounds seen and unseen. And while the war in Europe had ended, the war in the Pacific was not yet over. The bells rang, but the world was still hurting.

That is why Psalm 46:9 speaks with such power: “He makes wars cease to the end of the earth.” This is not a shallow promise. Psalm 46 begins by declaring, “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.” It does not pretend that trouble is imaginary. It speaks of earth giving way, mountains trembling, nations raging, and kingdoms tottering. Into that turmoil, God speaks—not as a distant observer, but as refuge, strength, and sovereign Lord.

When the psalm says that God breaks the bow, shatters the spear, and burns the shields with fire, it is painting a picture of more than a temporary ceasefire. It points toward God’s final reign, when instruments of violence are no longer needed, when justice and mercy meet, and when creation is restored under the peace of God. This is the peace weary people long for—not merely the silence after battle, but the deep healing of what battle has broken.

We can understand this in smaller, everyday ways. Imagine a hospital waiting room after a long and frightening surgery. For hours, a family sits beneath harsh lights, speaking in whispers, glancing at the clock, trying to read the faces of nurses passing by. No one knows what to say. Then the surgeon comes out, removes his mask, and says, “The surgery went well.” The room may not erupt in shouting, but something changes. Shoulders drop. Hands cover faces. Someone cries. Someone finally breathes. The danger may not be entirely past. Recovery may still be long. But the family has crossed a threshold. The worst has not had the final word.

That kind of peace is more than quiet. It is relief mingled with exhaustion. It is gratitude mingled with tears. It is the first breath after fear has held the chest too tightly.

V-E Day was something like that on a global scale. The bells did not undo the battles. They did not bring back the fallen. They did not erase the concentration camps, the bombed cities, the separated families, or the moral wounds of war. But they announced that a terrible chapter had turned. They declared that tyranny had not prevailed in Europe. They gave weary people permission, at least for a moment, to breathe.

Christian peace is even deeper, and it is just as costly. Christ does not give peace by pretending suffering is small. He gives peace by entering into suffering, bearing the weight of sin and death, and opening the way to reconciliation with God and with one another. The cross teaches us that peace is never cheap. It is not avoidance. It is not denial. It is not simply getting our way. True peace is purchased through love, sacrifice, forgiveness, truth, and mercy.

That means we who follow Christ are called to become bearers of peace in ordinary places. We may not be able to end wars between nations, but we can ask God to make wars cease within our own hearts. We can refuse to keep sharpening old resentments. We can speak gently in tense family conversations. We can pray for those still living under violence and fear. We can remember those who served, those who suffered, and those who never came home. We can practice small acts of reconciliation where bitterness has taken root. We can carry gratitude into a world that often forgets how costly peace can be.

Perhaps today there is a place in your life where the bells have not yet rung. A relationship remains strained. A grief still aches. A fear still lingers. A conflict still waits for healing. Psalm 46 does not ask us to pretend that these struggles are easy. Instead, it calls us to bring them under the care of the God who is refuge and strength.

When the bells finally rang on May 8, 1945, they did not erase the pain of war. But they announced that destruction did not have the final word. In Christ, we hear an even greater announcement. Sin does not have the final word. Death does not have the final word. Violence does not have the final word. The God who makes wars cease is still at work, quieting fearful hearts, healing wounded places, and leading creation toward the day when peace will be complete.

Prayer

God of refuge and strength, on this day of remembrance, we give thanks for every glimpse of peace after seasons of fear, struggle, and sorrow. We remember those who endured the long years of war, those who served, those who sacrificed, those who grieved, and those who never returned home. Comfort all who still carry the wounds of conflict, whether in body, mind, memory, or spirit. Teach us to seek the peace of Christ in our homes, our communities, our nation, and our world. Break the bows of bitterness within us, shatter the spears of pride and hatred, and make us instruments of your reconciling love until the day when all wars cease and your peace fills the earth. Amen.


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

The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.