Word Traveler

"my daily encounter with God through His Word"

Dave Scriven

Dave Scriven
Location
Beaverton, Oregon, USA
Birthday
October 06
Title
Principal Broker
Company
RE/MAX
Bio
This site is a two year writing experiment I call "P, B & J" (Prayer, Bible, and Journal) which follows a two year Bible reading plan. (A link to this reading plan is at My Links below.) As I read Bible, I look for an inspirational verse and write about it. These articles are my P, B & J journal entries. I hope you enjoy them. ________________________________ Bible guy, happily married, 7 kids, 1 cool grandkid, Realtor. If you want more, check out "My Story" at My Links below. Thanks! _______________________________ Credits: The black and white graphic of Moses at left of title bar is used by permission and entitled "The Spoken Law" by my friend and excellent comic book illustrator, Paul Gulacy.

MY RECENT POSTS

MARCH 21, 2011 9:43AM

"Don't Muzzle the Ox"

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Deuteronomy 25.4 NASB

“You shall not muzzle the
ox while he is threshing.”
The literal meaning and original purpose of this Mosaic law was to allow a certain level of freedom to a working beast. It should not be muzzled when harnessed to a threshing wheel. Further restriction of the animal would be unnecessary and impair its ability to complete the threshing task.

About 1,500 years later senior apostle Paul instructed his young protégé Timothy in leading the church at Ephesus by use of the same text…

For the Scripture says, ‘You shall not muzzle the ox while
it is threshing’ and ‘The laborer is worthy of his wages.’”
1st Timothy 5.17-18 NASU

Paul quoted Deuteronomy 25.4 verbatim. He made an application that helped Timothy financially support his preaching and teaching elders staff. “Muzzle the ox” was understood by the early church as a monetary limitation on those called to the pastoral ministry. Paul said a limitation of this kind should not be imposed.

About 2,000 years later still, I am commanded not to “muzzle the ox”. I don’t own livestock nor do I have direct responsibility for the wages of preachers. May I, then, toss out this verse as inapplicable or irrelevant, filing it away as Bible trivia? Or, does the same God who inspired Moses to write the these words and Paul to apply these words, prompt me to find fresh meaning from the mandate: “Do not muzzle the ox”?

This Scripture serves as a reminder that I will be called upon to interact with working men and women, harnessed to the threshing wheel of his vocational calling. I will be granted a divine opportunity to support or restrict my brother or sister in their work. They could use my support without which I become guilty of “muzzling the ox”.

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