Passage
And Gideon saith unto God, `If Thou art Saviour of Israel by my hand, as Thou hast spoken,
And Gideon saith unto God, `If Thou art Saviour of Israel by my hand, as Thou hast spoken,
Judges 6:34 and the Spirit of Jehovah hath clothed Gideon, and he bloweth with a trumpet, and Abi-Ezer is called after him;
Judges 6:35 and messengers he hath sent into all Manasseh, and it also is called after him; and messengers he hath sent into Asher, and into Zebulun, and into Naphtali, and they come up to meet them.
Judges 6:36 And Gideon saith unto God, `If Thou art Saviour of Israel by my hand, as Thou hast spoken,
Judges 6:37 lo, I am placing the fleece of wool in the threshing-floor: if dew is on the fleece alone, and on all the earth drought--then I have known that Thou dost save Israel by my hand, as Thou hast spoken;'
Judges 6:38 and it is so, and he riseth early on the morrow, and presseth the fleece, and wringeth dew out of the fleece--the fulness of the bowl, of water.
The verse centers on "gideon", "saith", "thou", "saviour", "israel", "hand", and "hast". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "gideon" and "saith", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 35's "and messengers he hath sent into all..." into verse 37's "lo I am placing the fleece of...", so "gideon" and "saith" belong inside that flow. In Judges context, the local focus is covenant, worship, and faithfulness.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "gideon" and "saith" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.