Meet "Mrs. Gad-about"

Meet "Mrs. Gad-about"
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READ Leviticus 26:1-27:34


SITUATION God, through Moses, presented blessings as a reward for obedience and cursing as a punishment for habitual sin. This lead the people to confess and reiterate their devotion to God with vows and tithes.


OBSERVATION God sets boundaries for our own good. We suffer when we break them. We must respond to his love so that we will not have to face his discipline.


INSPIRATION I once owned a ewe . . . . She was one of the most attractive sheep that ever belonged to me. Her body was beautifully proportioned. she had a strong constitution and an excellent coat of wool. Her head was clean, alert, well-set-with bright eyes. She bore sturdy lambs that matured rapidly.


But in spite of all these attributes, she had only one pronounced fault. She was restless, discontented--a fence crawler.


So much so that I came to call her "Mrs. Gad-about."


This one ewe produced more problems for me than almost all the rest of the flock combined.


No matter what field or pasture the sheep were in, she would search all along the fences or shoreline (we lived by the sea) looking for a loophole she could crawl through and start to feed on the other side.


It was not that she lacked pasturage. My fields were my joy and delight. No sheep in the district had better grazing.


With "Mrs. Gad-about" it was an ingrained habit. She was simply never contented with things as they were. Often when she had forced her way through some such spot in a fence or found a way around the end of the wire at low tide on the beaches, she would end up feeding on bare, brown, burned-up-pasturage of the most inferior sort.


But she never learned her lesson and continued to fence crawl time after time.


Now it would have bad enough if she was the only one who did this. It was a sufficient problem to find her and bring her back. But the further point was that she taught her lambs that same tricks. They simply followed her example and soon were as skilled at escaping as their mother.


Even worsts, however, was the example she set for other sheep. In a short time she began to lead others over the same holes and over the same dangerous paths down by the sea.


After putting up with her perverseness for a summer I finally came to the conclusion that to save the rest of the flock from becoming unsettled, she would have to go. I could not allow one obstinate, discontented ewe to ruin the whole ranch operation.


It was a difficult decision to make, for I loved her in the same way I loved the rest. Her strength and beauty and alertness were a delight to the eye.


But one morning I took the killing knife in hand and butchered her. Her career of fence crawling was cut short. It was the only solution to the dilemma.


She was a sheep who in spite of all that I had done to give her the very best care--still wanted something else. (From A Shepherd Looks at Psalm 23 by Phillip Keller)


APPLICATION Consider all that God has done for you in redeeming you form sin's captivity and providing you with blessing. In what areas do you overstep God's boundaries? Consider the consequences. Stop in your tracks. Flee from tempting circumstances. Return to the Lord, the Good Shepherd.
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