Luke 8:16-18
No one lights a lamp and then hides it under a
vessel or puts it under a bed. No! he puts it on a lamp-stand so that those who
come in may see the light. There is nothing hidden which will not be made
manifest; there is nothing secret which win not be known and brought into the
open. Take care, then, how you listen; for to him who has it will be given; and
from him who has not there shall be taken away even what he thinks he has.
Food for thought!
Here we have three sayings of Jesus, each with its
own warning for life.
(i) No one lights a lamp and then hides it under a
vessel or puts it under a bed. No! he puts it on a lamp-stand so that those who
come in may see the light.
This saying stresses the essential conspicuousness
of the Christian life. Christianity is in its very nature something which must
be seen. It is easy to find prudential reasons why we should not reveal our
faith in the world's face. In all of us, there is an instinctive fear of being
different; and the world is always likely to persecute those who do not conform
to pattern. And yet this is exactly what Jesus calls us to be, different!
A writer tells how he kept hens. In the hen house all except one hen were
marked the same. The one different hen was pecked to death by the other hens.
Even in the animal world, being different is a crime.
(ii) "There is nothing hidden which will not
be made manifest; there is nothing secret which will not be known and brought
into the open."
This one stresses the impossibility of secrecy.
There are three people from whom we try hide things.
(a) Sometimes we try to hide things from ourselves.
We shut our eyes to the consequences of certain actions and habits,
consequences of which we are well aware. It is like a man deliberately shutting
his eyes to symptoms of an illness which he knows he has. We have only to state
that to see its incredible folly.
(b) Sometimes we try to hide things from our fellow
men. Things have a way of coming out. The man with a secret is an unhappy man.
The happy man is the man with nothing to hide. It is told that once an
architect offered to build for Plato a house in which every room would be
hidden from the public eye. "I will give you twice the money," said
Plato, "if you build me a house into every room of which all men's eyes
can see." Happy is the man who can speak like that.
(c) Sometimes we try to hide things from God. No
man ever attempted a more impossible task. We would do well to have before our
eyes forever the text which says, "Thou art a God of seeing."
(Gen.16:13.)
(iii) "Take care, then, how you listen; for to
him who has it will be given; and from him who has not there shall be taken
away even what he thinks he has."
This lays down the universal law that the man who
has will get more; and that the man who has not will lose what he has. If a man
is physically fit and keeps himself so, his body will be ready for greater
efforts; if he lets himself go flabby, he will lose even the abilities he has.
The more a student learns, the more he can learn; but if he refuses to go on
learning, he will lose the knowledge he has. This is just another way of saying
that there is no standing still in life. All the time we are either going
forward or going back; we are either getting better or getting worse; we are
either getting more or getting less.
This law works in both spiritual and material
things; it works in businesses and in family affairs. It works everywhere,
every day, on everyone and in everything. If we really strive after more we
will get more, if we don't strive enough, we will get less; if we strive for
goodness and master this and that temptation, new heights of goodness will open
to us; if we give up the battle and take the easy way, much of the resistance
power we once possessed will be lost and we will slip from whatever height we
had attained.
It is the law Jesus applied to the woman that
anointed him with perfume: "So I tell you, her many sins have been
forgiven; because she has shown great love. But the one to whom little is
forgiven, loves little."
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