![]() |
| Copyright © 2003 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
|
P.O.
Box 53055 |
| September 19, 2003 |
|
BUYING A FARM FROM JED CLAMPETT
#5
WHY IS IT ALWAYS BURIED TREASURE? It seems like most good things don’t come easy. Good
grades take study. Raises come when you work hard. And treasure, for some
reason, is always buried. Why is that? And why did Jesus, in teaching
important truths, so often hide them in these very stories? “Jim rescues the frog, takes her to a place where she can clean herself, talks to frog, and then gives her a gift tied around her head.” This is from an Internet story detailing the history of it all. “Later Jim dreams of a beautiful woman who has shiny things on her body that sparkle like gold. The woman introduces herself as his aunty, the head of the Frog nation, and she thanks him for saving her life. Gifts will be given to you, she says, if you don’t tell anyone.” There’s a bit more here, so bear with me: “Frog woman comes to him again and tells him to go to the creek that runs out of the mountain and look for a reddish streak under the water.” Guess what that’s going to be? “Take a drink,” the story continues. “You’ll find something there, but don’t tell anyone.” Well, it sounds like an Internet legend, but what Skookum
Jim, and his Indian sister, Kate, who married a prospector named George
Carmack, found in actuality in Bonanza Creek, was $30 million worth of
gold. That’s right. One hundred and seven years ago, on August 31, 1896,
one of the great discoveries of all time took place. Miners who used to
nearly starve to death to get four or five cents’ worth of gold in a pan
suddenly had four or five hundred dollars’ worth of gold dust in each
one. In today’s currency, it would be close to a billion dollars. Notice that in these stories, the gold is always hidden.
It’s not just “treasure,” it’s “buried treasure.” Indiana Jones never
finds the jewels just lying on a table in his own back yard. They’re always
in a snake-infested cave, or in the deepest bowels of an archeological
dig somewhere, or in the booby-trapped dark recesses of an Amazon jungle.
“Why speakest thou unto them in parables?” The King James there makes it sound even harder, doesn’t
it? “But, Jesus, why do You use these stories about farmers sowing seeds
among the thorns and stony places? And that story about the wheat and
the tares? We don’t get that one. And the one about buried treasure. Jesus,
the POINT of Your story is buried treasure! We’re not tracking with You,
Lord! Why do You cloak your vital truths in these strange little anecdotes?” “Now to Him who is able to establish you by my gospel and the proclamation of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the MYSTERY hidden for long ages past, but now revealed and made known.” And the NIV scholars make this comment about the “hiddenness” of the gospel: “The so-called mystery religions of Paul’s day used the Greek word mysterion in the sense of something that was to be revealed only to the initiated.” And sometimes this or that religion — even, I confess,
Christianity — comes across this way. There’s a secret handshake. Mysterious
Bible codes. Strange beasts in Daniel and Revelation and preachers who
claim they’ve deciphered the symbols. People dunking each other in pools
of water, or having bread and wine with their church service. It all looks
very strange indeed, like a mysterious organization just for the select
few. “Paul himself, however, used [this word] to refer to something formerly hidden or obscure but now revealed by God for all to know and understand.” I can tell you this, friend. Jesus wanted everyone to understand His kingdom and to join His kingdom. “I’m not willing that any should perish,” He declared. “Whosoever will, may partake of the water of life.” The Bible is crystal clear about that. Why, then, did Jesus use these hidden stories? Let me share from the Clear Word paraphrase His own answer, and this is right in Matthew 13: “[Jesus] said to [the disciples], ‘You don’t need My help to understand what I’m trying to say because you really want to know what it means. It’s only those who don’t really want to know who can’t understand. The person who is guided by the Holy Spirit will receive all the insight he needs to understand what I’m saying, but anyone who doesn’t depend on the Holy Spirit to help him understand will soon lose the little insight he does have. The reason I use everyday illustrations is to give the Holy Spirit room to work on people’s hearts and minds. I can tell who really wants to understand and who does not.” Jesus might well have been thinking of the religious
leaders — the hypocrites and the Pharisees — as well as the Roman soldiers,
perhaps. “They don’t see, and they don’t want to see,” He concluded sadly.
“But if I proclaim the full message straight out, it will just bring opposition,
and cut My work short.” So He wisely used these quiet little stories,
these hidden treasures, and then, with a knowing glance or a nod, waited
to see the gleam of understanding in the eyes of those who really wanted
to know, really wanted to understand and to find the hidden treasure. “God does not conceal His truth from men,” she writes. “By their own course of action they make it obscure to themselves.” Either by sheer laziness or by living disobedient lives, we can make the Bible impossible to comprehend. Later in the same chapter, this writer adds: “[The Bible] is an inexhaustible treasure; but men fail to find this treasure because they do not search until it is within their possession.” One last point. Treasure is often buried so that only
those who value it WILL find it. But it also follows that you have to
understand what IS treasure! When is the substance in your pan pure gold
as opposed to fool’s gold? In fact, in the very next story Jesus told,
a man who knew pearls and shopped for pearls found a rare beauty. Knowing
it was rare, knowing it was worth a fortune, that’s exactly what he spent
for it. And so it is here. You have to know that eternal life is worth
something, and that a friendship with Jesus Christ is worth something,
or you won’t dig and you won’t spend. The Internet stories about the Eldorado
Gold Rush tell us that this Skookum Jim was given paper money by the people
who bought out his stake. Paper money? What’s that? He didn’t know any
better, so he tacked these strange pieces of paper up all over his cabin
there in the Klondike. He was surrounded by a mind-boggling fortune, and
didn’t know it. |
|
|