6.1 THE PARABLE
“The Kingdom of heaven is
like a treasure hidden in a
field, which a man found
covered up, then in his joy
goes and sells all that he
has and buys that field”
Mt. 13:44
6.2 THE TREASURE
Treasure in the Bible is
used in many different
senses. There are good
treasures and bad
treasures. In Matthew 12:35
Jesus says: “The good man
out of his good treasure
brings forth food and the
evil man out of his evil
treasures brings forth
evil.” See also Luke 6:45.
Prophet Micah speaks about
treasures of wickedness.
Evidently in our case it
brought joy and therefore
must have been a good
treasure.
The Bible speaks of
treasures in our earthly
vessel, hid within his
church on earth in the
hearts of his elect which
shows, “that the
transcendent power belongs
to God and not to us.” (2
Cor. 4:7) The treasure
mentioned here is the power
of God - the Holy Spirit -
which cannot be defeated by
man and his elaborate
endeavors.
The treasure is again
identified in the Old
Testament Proverbs 2:4 and
8:21 as “the fear of the
Lord” or the “Knowledge of
God.” “If you seek it like
silver and search for it as
for a hidden treasure, then
you will understand the
FEAR OF THE LORD, and
find the KNOWLEDGE OF GOD.
For the Lord gives wisdom;
from his mouth comes
knowledge and
understanding.” (Pro.
2:4-6) In the New Testament
terms it is the knowledge of
God’s mystery - i.e. Christ
and the Word of God. “To
have all the riches of
assured understanding and
the knowledge of God’s
mystery, of Christ in whom
are hid all treasures and
wisdom and knowledge. “
(Col. 2:3)
Thus the hidden treasure is
nothing but the knowledge of
the mystery of God in
Christ. This treasure was
hidden by earth - covered by
base things of this world.
But it was also hidden in
the hearts of men that the
world might know that the
transcendent power belongs
to God.
In this story the man first
hid it for fear that it
will be taken away from
him. But in his joy he went
and sold everything he had
and bought it. We shall see
how this has come about in
this period in history.
6.3 GOD SHOWS HIS
TRANSCENDENCE
We have seen how during the
period of the State Church,
the clergy became more and
more powerful until the
Church became the State
under Papal Empire of Rome.
Though it was more prominent
in Rome, the same type of
growth took place in other
parts of world to a lesser
extent. The legalism and
rituals and external
coverings hid the true
Gospel. In the accelerated
development of the
priestcraft, the word of God
was finally taken away from
the people. God now stepped
in. He brought out by the
might of his spirit people
who had access to the
written word of God - some
of the clergy, professors in
clerical seminaries and the
monks - to open up their
eyes and see the hidden
treasure. They were able to
see the real Gospel of
Salvation through Christ by
Grace. The interesting
thing is that this discovery
was not confined to one
place. It cropped up in all
parts of the world almost
simultaneously.
In England John Wycliff
having been saved
through the word, began to
prepare a group of teachers
for ministering the word to
the common people. He was
protected by his friends by
hiding him when the official
church tries to kill him.
His followers made hundred
of copies of the bible by
copying them by hand and
distributed them all
throughout the country.
Even though the priests
tried to destroy them,
people guarded them even
with their lives.
In Bohemia, John Hus
(1373-1415) began to teach
the bible to the common
man. This angered the Pope
who invited him to discuss
the matter over. He was
promised good conduct and
immunity while in Rome, if
he appeared before Pope.
However when he did, he was
arrested and burned on a
stake. The church, they
said, does not have to honor
the promises made to
heretics. But this did not
stop the growth of the
church in Bohemia, and in
the neighboring Moravia.
There followed 200 years of
persecution for Hussites
until a rich Lord named
Ninderdorf joined them. He
gathered the scattered
churches into a fellowship
on New Testament lines
called “Philadelphia” in
1722.
The there was Martin
Luther (1517), a monk
teaching in a German
Seminary who discovered the
treasures of “justification
by faith alone” and
“salvation by grace, free by
the sovereign mercy of
God.” At first he did not
wanted to be separated from
the church. According to
the normal practice of the
time, he laid open his 95
theses on the door of the
Cathedral. But the general
mass and the German Princes
(who were not happy with the
Papal ruling anyway) soon
took up the issue. He
translated the bible into
German and wrote many hymns.
John The Swiss Cantons were
already on the side of
reformation under
Huldrich Zwingli
(1484-1531). Calvin
of Geneva (born in France in
1509) gave Protestantism its
precise form and clear
definition. The Swiss
Cantons were already on the
side of reformation under
Huldrich Zwingli.. Swig
quarreled with Luther on
several points where he
compromised with the
Roomanism. In Geneva Calvin
became the head of the State
and set up a theocracy.
While the Lutherans
maintained the Episcopal
system, the Calvinists
preferred the elder system.
There were others like
Gabriel Zwilling (1487-1558)
a fiery monk who denounced
idol worship, sacrificial
mass and clerical vows
vehemently. Gulaumme
Farel (1489 - 1565) the
pioneer of Protestantism in
Switzerland; John Knox
of Scotland; Casper
Schwenkfled (1490-1561)
a revolutionary mystic
Anabaptist; William
Tyndale (1492 -1536);
Menno Simons (1496 -
1561) who originated the
Mennonite Movement and many
others.
It is important to note that
these revivals were always
associated with the
publication of the Bible in
the language of the people.
It is the word of God,
Jesus who creates and
recreates. Not by might,
nor by power, says the Lord
but by my word. Revival
recreation and rebirth
follows wherever the word of
God is preached.
Romanism dazed by the
enthusiastic reception of
the biblical truths lashed
out in vengeance by mid 16th
century in an inquisition
on the model of 1480 Spanish
Inquisition. It published
an index of books forbidden
to the Roman Catholics which
included the Bible. A
council was finally called
in Trent which lasted from
1545 to 1563 and Roman
Catholic Bishops reiterated
the supremacy of the
priestcraft. Under this new
bondage, the faithful who
refused to leave the Roman
Church returned to mysticism
as a refuge.
Church of England was a
compromised between Romanism
and Protestantism. Puritans
insisted on a more radical
elimination of all symbols
of Romaine origin. In
Europe the Anabaptists even
opposed the ownership of
private property. They were
fiercely persecuted and
were scattered all over
Europe. From this was born
the Baptist Church. The
Quakers and Methodists began
as a small house groups.
Methodism grew up into a
large international church
under John Wesley
(1703 - 1791) and his
brother Charles Wesley
(1707 - 1788 the author
of over 5000 hymns) and
under the great orator
George Whitefield (1714
-1770)
6.4 THE ESCAPING CHURCH
The church now freed from
the domination of Romanism
was a joyful church. But
the sheer force of being
wrenched out of the
institutional church led it
to become a personal
religion. The church as a
whole maintained the
structure of priesthood and
administration of Romanism,
but faith became a personal
affair. Secularism of faith
was its first implication.
The state and the church
were defined as active in
two separate spheres of
human existence - one in
physical realm and the other
in spiritual realm. There
arose a complete seclusion
of political, economic and
social life from the faith
of the person. In this
failure to express faith in
socio-political realms,
developed an inward looking
pietism.
On the other hand, the
failure of the Church in
expressing its holiness
through society and state,
brought forth the real
weapons for Satan. From
this evolved the concept of
Super Man God of this age.
“God is dead. We killed
him”, declared Nietzche the
son of a German Lutheran
Pastor (1844 -1900). “God
is dead. He spoke to us and
now he is silent. It is
time to transvalue all
values of life and
Philosophy.”
In the fields of science,
philosophy and thought, new
and revolutionary steps were
made. It will be difficult
to make even a passing
reference to all mean and
ideas in all these fields
here to indicate their
influence on the liberated
church. The pendulum was
moving in the opposite side
to higher levels.
In the fields of science a
mechanistic model of the
universe evolved. Even man
was reduced to a machine
leading eventually to naive
materialism. These came
about through the emphasis
and growth of mechanics of
rigid bodies and Astronomy
under Galilee and Newton
(1642 - 1727) . To many
materialists of that time
Newton’s laws of gravity
replaced God. Newtonians
presented mankind with a
universe of mathematically
perfect machine. In
Helvetius (1715 - 1771) it
culminated in a man, who is
purely a physical being in
all actions by the
principles of pain and
pleasure which Henry
L’Holberch (1723 - 89) was
interpreted to mean
“greatest happiness to
greatest number” as the root
of all ethics. This period
is generally known as the
Age of Reason.
Then came Darwin’s Theory of
Evolution which questioned
the truthfulness of the
Biblical Creation story.
Vast amount of evidences
collected together
apparently indicated an
order of evolution -
obviously with lot a gaps -
though scientists and
sociologist differed about
the laws that governed such
evolutionary process. The
principle of evolution -
though clearly opposed the
second law of thermodynamics
- was soon applied to the
creation of the universe and
to the development of human
society. If man could
evolve out of chaos by mere
chance of one in a million
trillion or more, won’t he
now evolve into a superman?
Won’t he be able to produce
a super-society? Karl Marx
was the son of Jewish
Christian with shattered
dreams of eschatological
realization. He produce the
concept of Heaven on Earth
by the natural and
deterministic evolution of
society which paralleled the
Christian eschatology. His
messiah was historical
evolution and his apostles,
the class struggle.
Marxism was the greatest
Christian heresy of the
period.
The final vicious attack
came from within the church
scholarship. The Higher
criticism threw serious
doubts about the word of God
itself. The scientific
tendencies of the period
began to scorn the ideas of
Satan, heaven and Hell.
Miracles were explained off
on natural terms. There was
this serious search for
“Jesus of History” as they
began to dismember and throw
out parts of the Gospel.
In the face of such
formidable attacks an ill
prepared church withdrew
into its shells. Everything
that was considered sacred
by the Christians were now
questioned. In it the only
substance that was left
behind was a few precepts.
“You shall love your
neighbor as thyself:. From
it arose the social message
of salvation to the utter
denial of the existence of
soul of man, the reality of
the spirits or even beings
that are non-material.
Christ simply became a
social revolutionary and
nothing more. He lost his
battle on the cross leaving
an example for others to
follow. He started a fight
which must be carried on for
the sake of man’s
existence. Blood, the
center of Christian message
became the result of poor
planning and intolerant
public relation of an
illiterate- but good and
sincere- carpenter’s son
All the time Satan was
laughing his head off.
6.5 JESUS WRITES TO THE
CHURCH IN SARDIS
Sardis means escaping. The
story of the City of Sardis
in Asia Minor is the story
of repeated defeats of a
very strongly fortified city
on a mountain top by its
sheer unpreparedness. You
can read more about this in
my article on the Seven
Churches in Asia Minor
Revelation 3:1 "To the
angel of the church in
Sardis write: These are the
words of him who holds the
seven spirits of God and the
seven stars. I know your
deeds; you have a reputation
of being alive, but you are
dead.
2 Wake up! Strengthen what
remains and is about to die,
for I have not found your
deeds complete in the sight
of my God.
3 Remember, therefore, what
you have received and heard;
obey it, and repent. But if
you do not wake up, I will
come like a thief, and you
will not know at what time I
will come to you.
4 Yet you have a few people
in Sardis who have not
soiled their clothes. They
will walk with me, dressed
in white, for they are
worthy.
5 He who overcomes will,
like them, be dressed in
white. I will never blot out
his name from the book of
life, but will acknowledge
his name before my Father
and his angels.
6 He who has an ear, let
him hear what the Spirit
says to the churches.

-
John Wycliffe (A.D.
1328-1384)
-
John Huss (A.D.
1369-1415)
-
Thomas A Kempis (A. D.
1380-1471)
-
Girolamo Savonarola
(A.D. 1452-1498)
-
Desiderius Erasmus (A.D.
1466-1536)
-
William Tyndale (A.D.
1494-1536)
-
Martin Luther (A.D.
1483-1546)
-
Philip Melanchthon (A.D.
1497-1560)
-
John Calvin (A.D.
1509-1564)
-
Ulrich Zwingli (A.D.
1484-1531)
-
John Knox (A.D.
1513-1572)
-
Conrad Grebel (A.D.
1498-1526)
-
Menno Simons (A.D.
1496-1561)
-
Thomas Cranmer (A.D.
1489-1556)
-
Hugh Latimer (A.D.
1485-1555)
-
Miles Coverdale (A.D.
1488-1568)
-
Jacobus Arminius (A.D.
1560-1609)
-
Thomas Cartwright (A.D.
1535-1603)
-
Robert Browne (A.D.
1550-1633)
-
Oliver Cromwell (A.D.
1599-1658)
-
John Owen (A.D.
1616-1683)
-
John Bunyan (A. D.
1628-1688)
-
Ignatius Loyola (A.D.
1491-1556)
-
Jean Daille (A.D.
1594-1670)
-
Francis Xavier (A.D.
1506-1552)
-
Jon Amos Comenius (A.D.
1592-1670)
-
Johann Arndt (A.D.
1555-1621)
-
Madame Guyon (A.D.
1648-1717)
-
Philip Jacob Spener
(A.D. 1635-1703)
-
August Hermann Francke
(A.D. 1663-1727)
-
Johannes Albrecht Bengel
(A.D. 1687-1752)
-
Count von Zinzendorf
(A.D. 1700-1760)
-
William Law (A.D.
1686-1761)
-
John Wesley (A. D.
1703-1791)
-
George Whitefield (A. D.
1714-1770)
-
George Fox (A.D.
1642-1691)
-
Roger Williams (A.D.
1603-1683)
-
Jonathan Edwards (A.D.
1703-1758)
-
Francis Asbury (A.D.
1745-1816)
-
David Brainerd (A.D.
1718-1747)
-
John Nelson Darby (A.D.
1800-1882)
-
George Muller (A.D.
1805-1898)
-
Andrew Murray (A.D.
1828-1917)
-
Charles Finney (A.D.
1792-1875)
-
Charles Spurgeon (A.D.
1834-1892)
-
Dwight L. Moody (A.D.
1837-1899)
-
John Henry Newman (A.D.
1801-1890)
-
William Carey (A.D.
1761-1834)
-
David Livingstone (A.D.
1813-1873)
-
Hudson Taylor (A.D.
1832-1905)
-
Karl Barth (A.D.
1886-1968)
-
Watchman Nee (A.D.
1903-1972)
-
Billy Graham (A.D. 1918
- )