You ever read something in the Bible and wonder if it’s really that solid?
Not out loud. Just quietly.
Because you’ve trusted words before. People said things. Promises were made. And they didn’t hold.
So when Scripture says God’s words are pure… part of you wants to believe it.
But another part hesitates.
Can His words really be that reliable?
Let’s see what the Scripture actually says.
Psalm 12:6 (KJV)
“The words of the LORD are pure words: as silver tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times.”
Start with that first statement.
“The words of the LORD are pure words”
Not mostly true. Not generally reliable.
Pure.
That means no mixture. No corruption. No hidden flaw.
When God speaks, there’s nothing in it that will mislead you.
That’s a big claim.
Because everything else you hear comes mixed.
Opinions mixed with truth. Intentions mixed with weakness.
But not His words.
So the question is, do you actually treat them like that?
Then comes the picture.
“As silver tried in a furnace of earth”
Silver doesn’t become pure by sitting untouched.
It goes through fire.
Heat exposes what doesn’t belong.
Impurities rise. They’re removed.
What’s left is refined.
So God is giving you a picture you understand.
Something proven. Tested. Refined under pressure.
Do you see what He’s saying?
Then it goes even further.
“Purified seven times”
Seven in Scripture often points to completeness.
Not just refined once.
Fully refined. Completely pure.
Nothing left to burn off.
That means there’s no hidden defect in His word waiting to show up later.
That’s not what you expected, is it?
Now look at the context.
Psalm 12 starts with a problem.
“Help, LORD; for the godly man ceaseth… the faithful fail.”
People are lying. Flattering. Speaking with double hearts.
Words are being used to deceive.
That’s the setting.
Unreliable speech everywhere.
Then God speaks in verse 5.
He promises to arise and help the oppressed.
And right after that, verse 6 tells you something important.
His words are not like theirs.
Human words are unstable.
God’s words are pure.
That contrast is the whole point.
Other Scriptures confirm this.
Proverbs 30:5 (KJV)
“Every word of God is pure: he is a shield unto them that put their trust in him.”
Notice the connection.
His pure word becomes protection when you trust it.
Then this.
Psalm 119:140 (KJV)
“Thy word is very pure: therefore thy servant loveth it.”
The more you see its purity, the more you value it.
And this.
John 17:17 (KJV)
“Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth.”
Not just true statements.
Truth itself.
Now bring this into your life.
You’ve been shaped by words that failed you.
Things people said that didn’t hold up.
Maybe even things you told yourself that weren’t true.
So when you come to God’s word, you don’t always approach it as pure.
You question it. Adjust it. Filter it through experience.
Is that what’s been happening?
Do you trust it in theory… but hesitate in practice?
Here’s the tension.
God’s word is pure.
But your experience has been mixed.
So when those two collide, something has to give.
And most of the time, you lean toward what you’ve seen instead of what He said.
So what does this look like in a real moment?
You read something clear in Scripture.
Forgive. Trust. Let go. Speak truth.
But your instinct pushes back.
Because it doesn’t feel safe. Or logical. Or fair.
That’s where this verse meets you.
His words are already refined.
They don’t need your adjustment.
They don’t need your improvement.
They need your trust.
What would it look like to actually take His word as pure in that moment… instead of filtering it?
God’s words don’t carry hidden flaws.
They don’t break under pressure.
They don’t change when circumstances shift.
They’ve already been tested.
Fully.
Completely.
So here’s the question that stays with you:
Are you treating God’s word like it’s pure… or like it still needs to prove itself to you?
Call to Action: The Question That Demands an AnswerIn Acts 2:37 Peter and the Apostles were asked the question – What Shall We do? And in Acts 2:38 Peter answered, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For the promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call. Do you understand this? After hearing the gospel and believing, they asked what should would do. The answer hasn’t changed friend, Peter clearly gave the answer. The question for you today is, Have you receieved the Holy Spirit Since you believed? If you’re ready to take that step, or you want to learn more about what it means to be born again of water and Spirit, visit: Come, and let the Spirit make you new. |





