Silence and Speech

His Holiness Pope Shenouda III speaks about the spiritual relationship between silence and speech, explaining that words are not mere sounds but the fruit of the heart. A word can lead to salvation or condemnation, as Scripture says: “By your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemned.”
✝️ Speech as the mirror of the heart:
The Pope teaches that the tongue reflects the heart; good words come from a pure heart, while evil words come from a corrupt one. A pure heart cannot produce unclean speech — the two are inseparable.
💬 The virtue of silence:
The saints practiced silence to avoid the sins of the tongue and to devote themselves to prayer. As St. Arsenius said: “I have often spoken and regretted it, but never have I regretted my silence.”
Silence gives time for thought and prevents sin, for “in the multitude of words sin is not lacking.”
📖 Responsible speech:
A person must weigh every word before speaking, since once spoken, a word cannot be taken back. The believer should pray for God to give him the right words that align with His will. Few and deep words are better than many and empty ones.
🌿 When silence is wrong:
Not all silence is a virtue. Silence in the face of injustice or falsehood is guilt. There is “a time to keep silent and a time to speak.” The Pope points to Peter and Paul, who boldly spoke the truth, showing that speech for God’s sake is a holy duty.
🌸 The good word:
Silence is a protective virtue, but higher still is good speech — words that comfort, teach, and build others up. The tongue was created to bless, not merely to stay quiet or to wound.
🕊 The manner of speaking:
Words must be truthful yet gentle, humble, and wise. True speech heals rather than hurts, for “a soft answer turns away wrath.” A timely word is “like apples of gold in settings of silver.”
🌞 Divine speech:
True spiritual speech is inspired by the Holy Spirit. Christ Himself spoke words that were “spirit and life.” Holy speech builds souls and leads them to repentance.
✨ The Pope concludes by calling everyone to use their tongue as an instrument of blessing — to speak when it is right, to be silent when it is wise, for “he who wins souls is wise.”
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