You can mess with the wrapping paper, but leave the gift alone.
Scripture
Read: Judges 6:11-12 Then the angel of the Lord came and sat under the oak
that was in Ophrah, which belonged to Joash the Abiezrite as his son Gideon was
beating out wheat in the wine press in order to save it from the Midianites. The
angel of the Lord appeared to him and said to him, “The Lord is with you, O valiant warrior.”
Application: Sometimes in an
effort to appear fresh, teachers of the Scriptures try too hard to come up with
new ideas that they hope will make their message unique. This passage is one
that has really been abused. We should take the time to consider how this
happens so we can: 1. Identify when someone is doing it, so we do not fall prey
to perversion of scripture: and 2. Make sure that we ourselves never overstep this
boundary. We must let the Scripture say what it says, and not try and adapt
it’s message, or expand it’s message to fit some desire we have. Notice, I said
“message”. There is no problem with adapting the method of presentation of the
message. Jesus did that. To fishermen He shared His message using the sea, boats
and fishing. To shepherds He shared His message using sheep and handling a
flock. It would be wrong to preach a message to a group of elementary kids the
same way you would preach it to an adult audience. The message would remain the
same but the presentation would adapt.
Many times I have heard
messages on the life of Gideon, and quite a few of them take a direction that
is clearly not in the passage, and if you're honest, does not make sense. What
some speakers do is first share how a person would thresh wheat normally. That
would be in the open, perhaps on a hill where a breeze would be blowing. You
would throw the grain into the air, the grain, being heavier would drop to the
ground while the chaff would be blown away by the breeze. Based on what the
“norm” is many speakers try to make Gideon appear to be a coward because he is
threshing wheat in a wine press.
Meditation Questions: What
do you do when you approach studying the Scripture? Do you read it trying to
find something new? What does that say? What does it mean to search the
Scriptures? What happens if you go to Scripture looking for something you want
to find? Is that good or bad? Why do you think that way? What makes a Scripture
lesson great to you? If a teacher brings a solid Scripture message, but it has
nothing new in it, how do you react to it? What does that show you?
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