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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

"...AND THY FATHER, WHICH SEETH IN SECRET, SHALL REWARD THEE OPENLY. MATTHEW 6



      One of my favorite passages of  Scripture is taken from Jesus' 
Sermon  on  the Mount.   In  the  first half  of  chapter 6  from  the  
gospel  recorded by  Matthew,  one  phrase is stated  three times,  
“..and thy Father which seeth in secret (himself) shall reward thee 
openly.”  (The word, “himself” is only used in the instance of verse 
4. kjv)

     Looking  in verses 1 through 4 we find,   “Take heed that ye do 
not your alms before men, to be seen of them: otherwise ye have no 
reward of  your  Father  which is  in heaven.  Therefore  when thou 
doest thine alms, do not sound a trumpet before thee,  as the hypo-
crites do in the synagogues and in the streets,  that they  may  have  
glory of men.  Verily,  I say unto you, They have their reward.  But 
thou when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right
hand doeth: That thine alms may be in secret: and thy Father which 
seeth in secret, himself shall reward thee openly.”

    Apparently, some men who came to the synagogue at the time this 
was spoken were  given to grand  public  displays  before the people  
to  draw attention to their offering.  Although the motive for giving to  
the Lord is not performed for reward, but out of obedience, there is a 
reward to the believer who gives.  Hypocrites of early times,  as well 
as today, lose any reward from the Lord when the gift is not in secret.  
This goes to  motive and  reflects on  the lack of  pure worship on the 
part of the giver.  Our Lord looks on the heart, not on outward action.  
He is,  however; cognizant of our outward actions, which are  critical.

       As we continue in this same passage,  the next reference is to 
prayer.  There is a statement about the way hypocrites perform wor-
ship.  “..they love to pray standing in the synagogues and in the cor-
ners of the streets, "that they may be seen of men".   Verily I say 
unto you, They have their reward.   But thou, when  thou prayest,  
enter into  thy closet,  and when thou  has shut thy door,  pray to thy  
Father which is in  secret;  and thy Father which seeth in secret shall  
reward thee openly.”  At this point there is also further instruction on 
prayer, and a warning  against the use of “ vain repetition.”   Verses
8 through 13 give example of how to pray.)  The  principle is  clear as  
is the reference to  the giving of alms.  There are some who believe 
prayer  should always  be made in  private and  do not pray  in public. 
With that in mind; if you pray publicly, make  sure the  prayer is to  
the Father  without  cognizance of those around. ( I am not sure this
is possible.) The text does say, "When you pray..." and may mean 
we do not pray in public.  I have had issue with this and just make a
suggestion that we always pray to the Father, in the name of the Son
without taking into of those who might hear. 

   Effectual,  fervent  prayer should  always be in  private,  since this 
keeps us from falling in the same  pitfall as  hypocrites.  We should  
never  pressure anyone to  pray  in public if they are  the  least bit 
reticent,  for this is a valid point considering  the wording of  this pa-
ssage in Scripture.)

    Finally in this same chapter, verses 16 through 18, there is instruc-
tion on fasting.  The principle is the same  in earlier references.  One 
thing occurred to me several years ago on my first occasion to discuss 
this passage with teens.  The three forms of worship,  having the com-
mon principle, have more in common than this.  When you look at the 
last,  you find  persons who fast,  deny self,  will have that  he did  not 
consume to give to the poor in the manner prescribed.  He is  blessed 
openly, and  has more.  For,  as he  gives in obedience,  he is  blessed  
of the Lord.  He then gives thanks  to the Lord for that,  in prayer,  in
secret, and rewarded again.  All my life I have heard the  phrase time
and again,  “You  can’t out give the Lord.”  I believe we can take this
this  Scripture and  teach that principle.  It is a cycle of blessing avail-
able to each of us as we learn principles of  Scripture,  put them to the 
test  as in  Malachi 3:10 and  watch the Lord  work.  "Bring ye all  the 
tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat in mine house,  and 
prove me now herewith, saith the Lord of Hosts,  if I will not open you 
the windows of heaven, and pour you out a  blessing,  that  there shall 
not be room  enough to receive it."   Is Scripture showing us that chil-
dren of God can/must qualify for the  blessings of the Lord?   I find no 
place in  God's  Word  indicating  otherwise.   I  also believe  Matthew 
Chapter 6 teaches the motive in the giving of alms,  prayer and fasting 
have a great deal to do with the resultant blessing.  
   (You might choose to read verses 8 thru 11 of Malachi 3 for details.)

I have chosen to take this part of  the Bible and it's principles literally.
There may be those who  read  this who believe  blessings of  the Lord 
are Spiritual, not material.  If that is true, it makes the passage no less
worthy of our consideration, since the Spiritual is eternal and material
blessing  is temporary having to  do only with  this  life.  However  you 
apply this is not really vital since it works either way. Another  sugges-
tion  brought  to  my attention is  the fact  that these  are not promises,
but principles.  If  we are foolish enough to give something for the pur-
pose of being blessed, that must be the  poorest in choices available to 
us.  Be a  person who  lives with  hands open to  those  who  have need 
and see our Lord work.

donporter                                                                                          May 22, 2013


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