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SECRETS
All Bible
references are to the Anglicised New International Version
(NIV-UK)
No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has
prepared
for those who love him — but God has revealed it to us by his
Spirit.
The Spirit searches all things, even the deep things of
God.
― 1 Corinthians 2: 9, 10 ―
‘THREE MAY KEEP A SECRET, if
two of them are dead’ ― so said Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), American
statesman, scientist and philosopher. His observation has the ring of truth,
though according to Hebrews
11: 4, the dead are not necessarily dumb, as Abel still
speaks, though dead.
While speech is the primary means of imparting
information, secret or not, other observable factors may ‘speak volumes’ about a
person or a situation without the use of words. King Solomon gives an example:
‘I went past the field of the sluggard, past the vineyard
of the man who lacks judgment; thorns had come up everywhere, the ground was
covered with weeds, and the stone wall was in ruins. I applied my heart to what
I observed and learned a lesson from what I saw’ (Proverbs 24: 30-32). So it
follows that we may by observation be made aware of what another believes to be
safely hidden.
On the other hand, there is sometimes a need, even a
compulsion, to confide in one other person the details of a circumstance hard to
be borne alone ― perhaps a guilty secret, and the need may outweigh the
risk of rejection or betrayal. The Christian believer is blessed above all
others in having resource to prayer, communion with the Heavenly Father, who
will never fail to comfort and carry the burden.
The secret
of the Lord is with those who reverence Him
Yes! Our
God is not the severe taskmaster who expects blind obedience without question.
Rather, He says ‘Come now, let us reason together’ (Isaiah 1: 18). And more than that
― He wishes to confide in His people! As King David says:
‘The secret of the LORD is with
them that fear Him; and He will shew them his covenant’ (Psalm 25: 14, King
James Version)
What
evidence do we have that the Almighty has taken into His confidence certain ones
of the human family? The Scriptures provide numerous
examples.
To
Noah, a righteous man living at a time when earth’s society had become
extremely corrupt and violent, God revealed His intention to destroy the entire
human race in a great flood, saving only Noah and his family. That St. Peter
calls him a ‘preacher
of righteousness’
implies that Noah did not hide the information from others, but their unbelief
rendered it valueless to them. Genesis
6: 3 indicates that the
days of sinful man would be a hundred and twenty years,
and it may be that Noah warned the people throughout that period of time, but to
no avail.
Of Abraham
the scriptures tell us that he believed God, and this was credited to him as
righteousness. He is called the ‘friend of God’ ― an exceptional accolade (James
2: 23). This was a man whom God took into His confidence, saying ‘Shall I hide from Abraham what I am about
to do?’ (Genesis 18: 17).
The most extraordinary secret the
Lord confided to Abraham was that through him and his offspring all families of
the earth would be blessed. ‘I will make your descendants as numerous as the
stars in the sky and . . . like the dust of the earth . . . All peoples on earth
will be blessed through you and your offspring’ (Genesis 26: 4; 28:
14).
While many of his immediate family
shared his faith, others of Abraham’s descendants lacked his utter confidence in
God’s promises, and many centuries passed before further light was shed upon the
progress of the Divine project. While the
Old Testament gives no precise details as to its outworking, we have New
Testament evidence that Abraham himself possessed a vision of Jehovah’s great
plan of redemption for the entire world of mankind, a vision of the Kingdom of
Heaven on earth. ‘For he was looking forward to the city with
foundations, whose architect and builder is God’ (Hebrews 11:
10).
The same implicit faith was seen in
others who lived in expectation of a glorious future, ‘for they were longing for
a better country — a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called
their God, for he has prepared a city for them’ (Hebrews 11: 16). And the Lord
Jesus, rebuking the argumentative Jewish
hierarchy who tried to trap Him, declared that ‘Your father Abraham
rejoiced at the thought of seeing my day; he saw it and was glad’ (John 8:
56).
The Revealer of Secrets
Jesus was, of course, the supreme
revealer of the Divine plan. Yet wisdom required that He should exercise
caution, and it is thus recorded that ‘Jesus spoke all these things to the crowd
in parables; he did not say anything to them without using a parable. So was
fulfilled what was spoken through the prophet: “I will open my mouth in
parables, I will utter things hidden since the creation of the world”’ (Matthew
13: 34, 35).
Secrecy is
sometimes necessary. ‘There is a time for everything . . . a time to be silent
and a time to speak’ (Ecclesiastes 3: 1, 7). Even Bible truths are
too precious to reveal to those who would debase them. ‘Do not throw your pearls to pigs’
(Matthew 7: 6). Of course, secrecy
must not be overdone. As Jesus told the disciples, ‘this gospel of the
kingdom will be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations’
(Matthew 24: 14). They and their successors would give witness to the elementary truth that Jesus is
Saviour and King, and for those who accept Him, learning God’s deeper
secrets is a progressive experience.
Divine
providence has no doubt brought the gospel to those having the capability of
exercising faith, and His faithful people of the present time may echo the words
of an old-time prophet: ‘Surely the Sovereign LORD does nothing without revealing his plan to his servants
the prophets’ (Amos 3: 7).
Though the
gospel was preached to Abraham so long ago, the way the promise would be
fulfilled remained obscure for many centuries. Following the revelations of
Jesus to the faithful of His day, and after the baptism of the holy spirit at
Pentecost, the Apostles gained new insight into many of the Master’s teachings.
But it was
the Apostle Paul, once a fierce persecutor of the believers,
who was
especially blessed in becoming a major confidant of the Heavenly Father. And he
it was whom God used to unveil many of the mysteries of Divine revelation. Paul
tells us that the promised seed or offspring of Abraham is Christ, and gives the
faithful the amazing assurance that
there ‘is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you
are all one in Christ Jesus. If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s
seed, and heirs according to the promise’ (Galatians 3: 28, 29).
So we have become sharers of the secrets of
the Lord, knowing that in some way, and at some
time, if we remain faithful, we shall be instrumental with Father Abraham in the
blessing of all families of the earth. What eye could see, what ear
could hear, what mind could conceive a greater blessing for those who love the
Lord?
Copyright
September 2009 ukbiblestudents.co.uk
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