God's Precious Things

 •  3 min. read  •  grade level: 6
 
Our common moral sense of God will tell us that holiness and righteousness must be precious to Hint. "Holiness becometh Thine house. O Lord. forever." Psa. 93:5. Purity and truth, and the maintenance of all the cares of order and integrity, must be according to Him. The conscience will bear this witness.
Faith knows that His grace is precious to Him. He "delighteth in mercy." Mic. 7:18. The gospel provides joy for the divine mind. This truth may be beyond the thoughts of the conscience or the moral sense that is in us, but faith understands it.
The gospel is the gospel of the blessed, or happy God (1 Tim. 1:11). The feet of those who preach it on the mountains are beautiful in the eyes of the Lord, as arc the mystic garments of the priests, the ministers of it, in the Temple. "Glory and... beauty" (Rom. 10:15; Ex. 28:2; Heb. 2:7).
The divine mind is made known to us. We apprehend it, thus far, with certainly. A meek and quiet spirit is, with the Lord, of great price, and there is richest joy before Him in heaven in the grace that welcomes a lost and returned sinner.
But, are not His counsels dear to Him? Are not the events of His bosom dear to Him? The maintenance of righteousness and of godly order is precious to Him. The exercise of grace is joy to Him. Is not the purpose of His wisdom and the secret of His bosom alike dear to Him? Certainly it must be so. In the zeal of enforcing what is morally right, and in the publishing of evangelical truths, we may overlook this. The Church was the peculiar secret of God before the world was-a mystery kept secret from ages and generations but "hid in God." Can we not give this wonderful truth a place among the things that are precious with Him?
The Church is brought before us all through the Word of God. We have it shadowed in the man and the woman of the garden of Eden. It is brought before us by the Holy Jerusalem at the very close of the Apocalypse.
It is when the Spirit of Christ in David had for a moment rapidly touched or awakened the mystery, that the worshiper exclaims, "How precious also are Thy thoughts unto me, O God!" Psa. 139:17.
It must be so, though our moral judgment or our conscience, or even our common evangelic faith does not so quickly grasp it. We know, as we have said, that godliness is precious to Hint. But are not His own eternal counsels, the secrets of His bosom, precious to Him as well?
Known unto Him are all His works front the foundation of the world. Redemption was no afterthought with Him. He planned it all. All passed in bright review before Him when as yet there was none of them. And all was precious. And the mystery of the Church that has given a body to Christ, and a partner in glory to the Son of His love, lay there the deepest, because it was the dearest, in the bosom of sovereign and eternal counsels. Words of Truth