As all of you would probably know, one of 5 heinous crimes listed is divisive speech.
I never thought much of it before as I did not think that speech was such a big deal.
Thank you Helena for sharing.
Many including myself would not think of "divisive speech" as one of the 5 heinour crimes. Well if one wants to see the magnitude of divisive speech compared to the other 4 heinous crimes, which are : killing one's mother, killing one's father, killing an ahrat, drawing blood from a buddha, then one would start to realise the impact and consequences of "divisive speech".
Speech or words have a lot of power..........
Words can bring people together or set people apart.
Words can bring doubts to people's mind or clear any mis-understanding.
Words can break people's heart or heal the mind and soul.
Words can jump start a war or bring peace to the world.
And I guess the worst of all in divisive speech is to create doubts that set people apart from one's guru, the Dharma and the Sanga. It is worst, not only it is against Buddha's teachings, but if we do this, we are actually cutting off the possibilities of others to be able to receive teachings and blessings from their gurus, to receive the precious Dharma for their journey to enlightenment.
Speech come from thoughts, for some people, it is from habituation. They may just utter the words out without even processing through their brains.
Like Helena said, whatever we say, we MUST have awareness of others and the circumstances. But this does not mean we should act up and make a fairy tale speech. We should not say things that will have the implications of creating the wrong doubts in people's mind or with the conscious intention of dividing and breaking up people apart.
Than, how many words does a person say each day?
The only place I have seen documented research on this is
http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/003420.html and they say Inferred female and male daily word totals:
male = 6073 words per day
female = 8805 words per day
So make every single word you say a beneficial word that unite people in harmony rather than dividing people in anger and fear.