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| There is a Divine Darkness Which is Not Evil, and Which Ultimately Becomes Light. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
23. There is a Divine
Darkness Which is Not Evil, and Which Ultimately Becomes
Light.
In connection with this subject it is necessary for us
to point out that darkness is not to be understood, every time it is
mentioned, in a bad sense; Scripture speaks of it sometimes in a good
sense. The heterodox have failed to observe this distinction, and
have accordingly adopted most shameful doctrines about the Maker of the
world, and have indeed revolted from Him, and addicted themselves to
fictions and myths. We must, therefore, show how and when the
name of darkness is taken in a good sense. Darkness and clouds
and tempest are said in Exodus4744 to be round about
God, and in the seventeenth Psalm,4745 “He made
darkness His secret place, His tent round about Him, dark water in
clouds of the air.” Indeed, if one considers the multitude
of speculation and knowledge about God, beyond the power of human
nature to take in, beyond the power, perhaps, of all originated beings
except Christ and the Holy Spirit, then one may know how God is
surrounded with darkness, because the discourse is hid in ignorance
which would be required to tell in what darkness He has made His
hiding-place when He arranged that the things concerning Him should be
unknown and beyond the grasp of knowledge. Should any one be
staggered by these expositions, he may be reconciled to them both by
the “dark sayings” and by the “treasures of
darkness,” hidden, invisible, which are given to Christ by
God. In nowise different, I consider, are the treasures of
darkness which are hid in Christ, from what is spoken of in the text,
“God made darkness His secret place,” and (the saint)
“shall understand parable and dark saying.”4746 And consider if we have here the
reason of the Saviour’s saying to His disciples, “What ye
have heard in darkness, speak ye in the light.” The
mysteries committed to them in secret and where few could hear, hard to
be known and obscure, He bids them, when enlightened and therefore said
to be in the light, to make known to every one who is made light.
I might add a still stranger feature of this darkness which is praised,
namely, that it hastens to the light and overtakes it, and so at last,
after having been unknown as darkness, undergoes for him who does not
see its power such a change that he comes to know it and to declare
that what was formerly known to him as darkness has now become
light.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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