Down Gilead Lane, Season 10 | Episode 2
CHOICE MORSELS
Season Description
Been left wondering what happened to Mr. Key’s house? Who’s moving in? And who are all those new people in town? This is where you’ll find out the answers to all of those questions and more! It’s Season Ten of the hit family radio drama, Down Gilead Lane. This season is packed with extended scenes and lots of great adventure from your favorite town and your favorite characters.
Today’s Story
The Morrison kids are on the
case! With bulldozers across the
street, the “Attic Agents” are concerned about their neighborhood, and they’re
determined to solve the mystery.
The clues seem to be pointing toward certain people in Coleraine, but
will get all the facts straight, or in their enthusiasm, will they jump to
conclusions and damage somebody’s reputation?
How about
you…
Have you
ever hurt someone’s feelings or reputation by telling negative stories about
them?
Check this
out…
Take a
look at these words of wisdom found in the book of
Proverbs:
A
perverse man stirs up dissention and a gossip separates close
friends.
That’s
Proverbs 16:28. It’s a good one to
memorize and to take to heart.
There are a couple of big words to think through to make sure you’re
getting the message clearly. First:
“perverse” means twisted or turned to a wrong purpose. So, a “perverse man” is one who has
turned away from the purpose he is meant for. Second: “dissention” means disagreement
or quarreling.
One of
the qualities of the style of writing in the Proverbs and other poetic writing
in the Bible is to say the same thing 2 or 3 times in a row to emphasize the
point. So when this verse says the
first statement:
A perverse man stirs up
dissention
He wants
the reader to really get the point, so he says the same idea in a different way:
a gossip separates close
friends
So, the
point is that when we gossip, it is the same thing as being a “perverse man”,
and the main purpose of both those kinds of people is to turn close friends into
enemies who fight each other instead of getting along like they did before the
“stirring up” and the “separating”.
Make sure you don’t say anything that could put you into those kinds of
positions—just remember Proverbs 16:28.