There was a little boy with a bad temper.
His father gave him a bag of nails and told him that every time he lost
his temper to hammer a nail in the back fence.
The first day the boy had driven thirty-seven
nails into the fence. Then it gradually dwindled down. He discovered
it was easier to hold his temper than to drive those nails into the fence.
Finally the day came when the boy didn’t lose
his temper at all. He told his father about it and the father suggested
that the boy now pull out a nail for each day that he was able to hold
his temper.
The days passed and the young boy was finally
able to tell his father that all the nails were gone. The father
took his son by the hand and led him to the fence.
“You have done well, my son, but look at the holes
in the fence. The fence will never be the same. When we say
things in anger, they leave a scar just like this
one. You can put a knife in a man and draw it out. It won’t
matter how many times you say ‘I’m sorry,’ the wound is still there.
A verbal wound is as bad as a physical one.”
“Know this, my beloved brethren. Let every man be quick to
hear, slow to speak, slow to anger” (James 1:19).