11-05-2025 PART 2: Power in the Words God Spoke
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Section 1
Genesis opens with a pattern that frames all reality: “And God said… and it was.” In Genesis 1:3, 1:6, and 1:9, God speaks light into existence, separates the waters, and gathers the seas so dry land appears. Hebrews 11:3 explains the core truth behind these moments—what is seen was formed at God’s command, not from pre-existing visible material. In other words, there was nothing, God spoke, and then there was something; His Word is the agency that bridges nothing to something. Attempts to bypass this agency—whether by appealing to an undefined “all of a sudden” or an unexplained trigger behind a Big Bang—leave the essential cause unanswered. Scripture grounds that cause in God’s deliberate speech, establishing a theology of creation and a template for how divine words effect real outcomes.
Section 2
Because we are made in the image and likeness of God, our words carry consequential power, though not at God’s level. Proverbs 18:21 states that the tongue holds the power of life and death, showing that speech shapes destinies, relationships, and the atmosphere of our hearts. Jesus intensifies the point in Matthew 12:37: “By your words you will be acquitted, and by your words you will be condemned.” Our speech reveals our inner condition; listening to what we say exposes where we truly are with God. This is not about destabilizing God—nothing we say diminishes His being or authority—but about recognizing the profound impact our words have on others and on ourselves. Words can edify or corrode, heal or harm, align with truth or amplify deception; they always move something.
Section 3
Scripture repeatedly addresses two arenas where speech must be surrendered to God: how we talk to others and how we talk to ourselves. Conversations with people can either reflect the character of Christ or undermine it, while self-talk can either agree with God’s promises or entrench fear, shame, and unbelief. Surrendering both to God means submitting our speech to His standards—truthful, gracious, restrained, and edifying—so that our words participate in His creative, life-giving work rather than in the enemy’s distortion. The opening cadence of Genesis calls us back to first principles: God speaks, and reality responds. In light of that, we steward our tongues with reverent intentionality, letting our words be shaped by His Word, so that what follows brings life, clarity, and Christlike witness.