Lesson 25: Samson
Primary 6: Old Testament, (1996), 110–13
Purpose
To teach the children that by keeping our covenants, we will develop spiritual strength.
Preparation
- 1. Prayerfully study:
- • Judges 13:1–5, 24—Manoah’s wife is promised a son who will begin to deliver Israel from bondage. Samson is born.
- • Judges 14:5–6—Samson slays a lion with his bare hands.
- • Judges 15:3–8, 11–15, 20—Samson burns the corn of the Philistines and slays a thousand Philistines with the jawbone of an ass.
- • Judges 16:2–3—Samson carries away the doors of the city gates.
- • Judges 16:4–20—Samson is betrayed by Delilah and loses his strength.
- • Judges 16:21–31—Samson is blinded and put in prison. He destroys a building, killing himself and 3,000 others.
- 2. Study the lesson and decide how you want to teach the children the scripture account (see “Preparing Your Lessons,”p. vi, and “Teaching from the Scriptures,” p. vii). Select the discussion questions and enrichment activities that will best help the children achieve the purpose of the lesson.
- 3. Materials needed:
- a. A Bible for each child.
- b. A large stick (optional). and a pair or two of sweat pants that could fit the girls -- if doing stick pulling activity
- c. Picture 6-32, Samson Pulls Down Pillars.
Suggested Lesson Development
Invite a child to give the opening prayer.
Attention Activity
Ask for a volunteer to demonstrate how to flex his or her arm muscles. Let the whole class try it to see if they can feel their own muscles. You may want to let two children arm wrestle or pull sticks (a game Joseph Smith enjoyed). To pull sticks, have two boys sit on the floor facing each other, legs extended, knees bent, and the soles of their feet touching. Have each boy grasp the same large stick and try to pull the other up until he is standing on his feet.
Heart muscle: A type of muscle with unique features only found in the heart. The heart muscle, or cardiac muscle, is medically called themyocardium ("myo-" being the prefix denoting muscle). |
- • How do muscles help us? Discuss what happens when we exercise our muscles and what happens when we do not use them. Help the children realize that exercise helps us develop strong muscles.
- • Explain that our spirits also need to grow stronger. How can we become stronger spiritually? (By keeping our baptismal covenants, obeying our parents, praying, attending church, reading the scriptures, and so on.)
- • Why is it important to become spiritually strong? (So we can avoid temptation, be guided in our decisions by the Holy Ghost, and know good from evil.)
Help the children understand that we need to develop spiritual strength just as we need to develop physical strength.
Quote: "...we each have moments of spiritual power, moments of inspiration and revelation. We must sink them deep into the chambers of our souls. As we do, we prepare our spiritual home storage for moments of personal difficulty." -
Quote: "...we each have moments of spiritual power, moments of inspiration and revelation. We must sink them deep into the chambers of our souls. As we do, we prepare our spiritual home storage for moments of personal difficulty." -
Scripture Account
Using the picture at an appropriate time, teach the children the account of Samson from the scriptures listed in the “Preparation” section. (For suggested ways to teach the scripture account, see“Teaching from the Scriptures,” p. vii.) Use the following guidelines and information when discussing Samson:
- • Samson was called by the Lord to help free the Israelites from the Philistines.
- • Samson’s mission would require physical strength. The Lord made a covenant with Samson that as long as he obeyed the Lord, he would be physically strong. Samson’s long hair (see Judges 13:5) was a sign of this covenant.
- • Emphasize the times Samson was allowed to use his physical strength against the Philistines rather than discuss in detail his private life.
- • Samson served as a judge in Israel for twenty years.
- • When Samson kept his covenants he was blessed with the ability to help his people, but when he broke his covenants he lost both his spiritual and physical strength.
Discussion and Application Questions
Study the following questions and the scripture references as you prepare your lesson. Use the questions you feel will best help the children understand the scriptures and apply the principles in their lives. Reading and discussing the scriptures with the children in class will help them gain personal insights.
- • Why were the Philistines able to defeat the children of Israel? (Judges 13:1; point out that the Israelites had become spiritually weak.)
- • What message did an angel of the Lord give to Manoah’s wife? (Judges 13:3–5.) What did the angel say her son would be called to do? You may want to explain that Nazarites made a covenant to separate themselves from the things of the world and become holy unto the Lord. As part of this covenant, each Nazarite made a vow not to drink alcoholic drinks or cut his hair (see Numbers https://www.lds.org/manual/old-testament-student-manual-genesis-2-samuel/judges-13-21-ruth-1-4-the-reign-of-the-judges-part-2?lang=eng&query=samson6:2–6, 8; “Nazarite” in the LDS Bible Dictionary [p. 737]).
- 3 And the angel of the Lord appeared unto the woman, and said unto her, Behold now, thou art barren, and bearest not: but thou shalt conceive, and bear a son.
- • When Manoah heard what the angel told his wife, what did he do that showed he had spiritual strength? (Judges 13:8.) How can prayer help us develop greater spiritual strength?
- • Samson was able to use his physical strength many times to protect himself and to fight against the Philistines. Where did Samson get this physical strength? (Judges 14:5–6; 15:13–14.)
- 5 ¶Then went Samson down, and his father and his mother, to Timnath, and came to the vineyards of Timnath: and, behold, a young lion roared against him.6 And the Spirit of the Lord came mightily upon him, and he rent him as he would have rent a kid, and he had nothing in his hand: but he told not his father or his mother what he had done.
13 And they spake unto him, saying, No; but we will bind thee fast, and deliver thee into their hand: but surely we will not kill thee. And they bound him with two new cords, and brought him up from the rock.
- Help the children understand that the Lord blessed Samson with physical strength to accomplish his mission. When Samson kept his covenants and was strong spiritually, he was blessed with this physical strength. How are we blessed when we keep our covenants and are spiritually strong? (See enrichment activity 4.)
- • What did the Philistines offer Delilah if she would help them capture Samson? (Judges 16:4–5.) Why do you think people are sometimes tempted to do wrong for money? How can we avoid being tempted by riches?
- • Why did Samson finally give in and tell Delilah the secret of his strength? (Judges 16:16.)
- 16 And it came to pass, when she pressed him daily with her words, and urged him, so that his soul was vexed unto death;
- Why did Samson lose his strength? (Judges 16:19–20.)
- 19 And she made him sleep upon her knees; and she called for a man, and she caused him to shave off the seven locks of his head; and she began to afflict him, and his strength went from him.
- Help the children understand that Samson’s strength was not actually in his hair. His hair was a sign of his covenant with the Lord. When Samson broke his covenant by sinning, the Lord took away his physical strength. (See “Samson”in the LDS Bible Dictionary [p. 768].)
- • What did the Philistines do to Samson after they captured him? (Judges 16:21.)
- 21 ¶But the Philistines took him, and put out his eyes, and brought him down to Gaza, and bound him with fetters of brass; and he did grind in the prison house.
- Later, when they brought him out of prison for their own amusement and ridicule, what did Samson pray for? (Judges 16:28.)
- •Which kind of strength is more important, physical or spiritual? Why? Help the children understand that it is good to be strong physically, but it is much more important to be strong spiritually. Point out that some people are unable to develop physical strength, but anyone who tries can develop spiritual strength by keeping covenants and obeying commandments.
- • What happens when people become spiritually weak? (They give in to temptations, they sin, they lose the guidance of the Holy Ghost, and they lose the ability to fulfill their callings and bless others.)
- • How can we develop the spiritual strength we need to live the way Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ want us to live? (See enrichment activity 1.)
Enrichment Activities
You may use one or more of the following activities any time during the lesson or as a review, summary, or challenge.
- 1. Have the children take turns naming something they can do to become stronger spiritually, such as attend church, do something nice for someone, pray daily, be a peacemaker at home, read the scriptures, and so on. Write their answers on the chalkboard. When they have named all they can, give the children each a pencil and a piece of paper with the heading “I can be stronger spiritually by:” and have them write down one or more “spiritual muscles” they would like to “exercise,” or ideas they would like to work on, during the coming week. Encourage them to put the paper where they will be able to see it often.
- 2. Using the ideas listed in enrichment activity 1, let the children take turns choosing one and either pantomiming it or drawing it on the chalkboard and having the others guess which idea they are illustrating.
- 3. Remind the children that Samson made a covenant with the Lord but did not keep it.
- • What covenants did you make with Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ when you were baptized? (See Mosiah 18:8–10.) Discuss how keeping these covenants will help us be spiritually strong. You might want to point out that the children will also make covenants when they go to the temple, that making and keeping these covenants provide great spiritual strength in our lives, and that the children can prepare now for this great blessing by keeping the covenants they have already made.
- 4. Before class identify a strength you have observed in each child. Write a note to each one telling of this strength, such as, “Dear ________, you are strong in coming to Primary each week.” Some other ideas might include:
- Being kind to others
- Sharing your testimony
- Helping your parents
- Being a peacemaker
- Being a good friend
- Reading the scriptures
Point out that we all have different kinds of strengths. Heavenly Father needs us to use these strengths to serve him and to serve others. Read aloud each note you have prepared, without reading the names, and then give them to the children. Help the children realize that these are only some of the many strengths Heavenly Father has blessed them with. Give the children an opportunity to mention other strengths they have observed in class members. Encourage them to develop these and other strengths during the coming week. - 5. Pass out pictures of Adam and Eve, Noah, Abraham, Rebekah, and so on, and have the children tell how these people were spiritually strong.
- 6. With the approval of the Primary president, invite a ward or branch member to share an experience with the class that helped him or her develop spiritual strength. (Be sure to give the visitor a time limit.)
- 7. Sing or read the words to
“I Want to Live the Gospel”(Children’s Songbook, p. 148) or “I Will Be Valiant” (Children’s Songbook, p. 162).
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1. Object Lesson Activity - Soda Can Strength
Show your children an empty pop can, place it on the floor, and put your foot on it and balance your weight over it while holding onto the back of a chair. Let your children step on it and try to balance their weight on it also. Comment on how strong the can is.
Tell the children that Samson didn't always do what he was supposed to do. He did a bad thing when he wanted to please Delilah more than God. When we break our promises with Heavenly Father like Samson did it is like putting a dent in this can. (Place a dent in the can.) Now what do you think will happen if I try to step on this can? (Show your children how the can cannot hold your weight any longer.)
This is what sin does to our lives, and what it did to Samson's life. But remember, when we ask God to forgive us, he takes away our sins and it is like we have no more dents. (Show your children a new can.) God makes us strong again. (Let your children try the demonstration on other cans.)
Show your children an empty pop can, place it on the floor, and put your foot on it and balance your weight over it while holding onto the back of a chair. Let your children step on it and try to balance their weight on it also. Comment on how strong the can is.
Tell the children that Samson didn't always do what he was supposed to do. He did a bad thing when he wanted to please Delilah more than God. When we break our promises with Heavenly Father like Samson did it is like putting a dent in this can. (Place a dent in the can.) Now what do you think will happen if I try to step on this can? (Show your children how the can cannot hold your weight any longer.)
This is what sin does to our lives, and what it did to Samson's life. But remember, when we ask God to forgive us, he takes away our sins and it is like we have no more dents. (Show your children a new can.) God makes us strong again. (Let your children try the demonstration on other cans.)
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Conclusion
Testimony
Share your feelings about the importance of developing spiritual strength and living so that we can someday return to be with Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ.
Suggested Family Sharing
Encourage the children to share with their families a specific part of the lesson, such as a story, question, or activity, or to read with their families the “Suggested Home Reading.”
Suggested Home Reading
Suggest that the children study Judges 13:1–5, 24; 15:20; andJudges 16:25–30 at home as a review of this lesson.
Invite a child to give the closing prayer.
Sister Ann M. Dibb
Heavenly Father does not want us to look to the world and follow its ever-changing trends. He wants us to look to Him and follow His unchanging guidance. He wants us to live the gospel and lead others to it by setting the standard high.
The scriptures provide many great examples to illustrate this idea. In the book of Judges in the Old Testament, we learn about Samson.Samson was born with great potential. His mother was promised, “He shall begin to deliver Israel out of the hand of the Philistines.”9 But asSamson grew, he looked more to the world’s temptations than to God’s direction. He made choices because they “pleaseth [him] well”10rather than because those choices were right. Repeatedly, the scriptures use the phrase “and he went down”11 as they tell ofSamson’s journeys, actions, and choices. Instead of arising and shining forth to fulfill his great potential, Samson was overcome by the world, lost his God-given power, and died a tragic, early death.
https://www.lds.org/general-conference/2012/04/arise-and-shine-forth?lang=eng&query=samson
Related Music
“I Want to Live the Gospel”
(Children’s Songbook, 148)
(Children’s Songbook, 148)
“I Will Be Valiant”
(Children’s Songbook, 162)
(Children’s Songbook, 162)