sermon 8.
Don't Share Your
Secrets
A sermon preached on 18th February, 2018.
"A gossip goes around telling secrets, but those who are trustworthy can keep a confidence"--- Proverb 11:13 NLT.
Introduction
A
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man was
seen at the front of a bank inserting his ATM card into an ATM machine, and he
was using his hands and body to cover where he was putting his ATM secret PIN
(security code). His reason for doing that was that he did not want people to
know about his PIN, to avoid being swindled or defrauded. He could tell people
the bank he operates with, but he would never disclose his secret PIN to them.
He knows that his PIN is a password to his blessings and a source of his
livelihood. If he tells people about his secret, he could be ruined and doomed.
I then remembered a man who told his son all
about his ATM card PIN, and his son secretly took it to withdraw money. Thank
God that the son was apprehended by police on the way, when the police discovered
different ATM cards in his trousers pockets. They called his father on the
phone through the phone number the child provided. The father came, and he knew
that his son was in a big trouble. When he was asked if he was the one that
gave his son his ATM card to withdraw money, the man – having realized that he
was the one who would have to bail out his son if he said no to the police
question – admitted that he was the one.
From the Proverbs 11:13, there are two
classes of people that one may encounter in life. First, the gossip, and
second, the trustworthy.
1. The Gossips:
This set of people have flippant mouths. Their
mouths leak their friends' secrets like a roof of a house leaking water during
rainy seasons. Their intention of telling your secrets could, perhaps, be to
ridicule you, disparage your reputation, or making you become an object of
laughter. In most cases, you may be humiliated and begin to say, "What a
world! Had I known, I wouldn't have shared my secrets with them!"
Perhaps this thought resonated in the mind of
Sampson when Delilah finally betrayed his secrets to the Philistine men. We see
here that your secret is your life. Sampson revealed the source of his power to
Delilah, a woman he thought loved him, a woman who decided to betray him to her
people because of 1,100 pieces of silver. What about you, do you tell people's
secrets because of money? Or food? Or to please people? Have you been betrayed
by the revealing of secrets you told friends?
Note: When Sampson shared his secret to Delilah:
"My hair has never been cut," Judges 16:17, Delilah called a man
to shave his hair, scraping away the source of his power, and his strength left
him. This time she knew that Sampson had told her his secret, and she invited
in the Philistine rogues. Sampson thought he would do as usual to escape from
them, but without realizing that the Lord had left him. His eyes were gouged
out, and he then became completely blind. What a great tragedy! Telling of a
person's secrets to people can destroy him, and if you are sharing your
internal infirmity, how you're unable to feed well, how you suffer or what is
your next good plan to achieve, my dear, you are selling your worth and at the
same time destroying your future.
In Matthew 9:30,
Jesus Christ charged two blind men He healed to keep the healing secret. In His
word, He says, "Don't tell anyone about this." The reason Christ was
charging these men sternly not to tell anyone else about this miracle is not
known. Perhaps, He did not want to receive vainglory, or He did not want people
to know Him by this miracle. Whatever may be the case, we see He needed a
secret to be kept.
2. The Trustworthy
Persons:
These people are men
of integrity. They are reliable, and they can keep a secret. But do such men
still exist? “Everyone beware of his neighbor,” as Jeremiah 9:4 says, “And
don’t trust in any brother; for every brother will utterly supplant, and every
neighbor will go around like a slanderer. God is the only trustworthy Lord, for
He knows every secret in the heart of all men.”
Our society needs
trustworthy persons. They will never tell your secrets to people, but they can
disclose evil plans to the light. Yes, if you make your sin secret, you can
never prosper unless you confess.
Mordechai and Esther
were trustworthy people. Mordechai told Esther not to reveal her identity and
nationality to the King of Persia, (Esther 2:10), and Esther kept her identity
and nationality secret. But the moment Mordechai heard about the evil plan of
two of the King's eunuchs, Bigthana and Teresh, who were planning to
assassinate the King, he made the evil plan known to Esther and the King. Also,
when Saul wanted to kill David, it was Saul's daughter, Micah, the wife of
David. that revealed the plot to David, and asked him to run away for his dear
life.
Where are the
Mordechai and Micah of this generation? Who is to be trusted at this perilous
time? Our political and religious leaders of this generation, are they
reliable? Christians, can we rise up and reposition ourselves and be people of
integrity? Can we rise up and do the work of He Who called us into faith?
If no one tells you
of his secret, know that you are not reliable, and unworthy to keep it. Perhaps
you have betrayed someone's secret before. You've been mocked because of
wrong, untrustworthy fellows, who spread mostly the odd parts of your life.
Today, God will pay them back. He paid back the Philistines for what they did
to Sampson, after Sampson prayed, “Lord, let me die along with my enemies.” We
learn that 3,000 people died. You shall not perish along with the gossip, the
wicked, nor will you die along with your enemies of progress.
God bless you.
For comments and
suggestions email the Man of God via fortune.nwaiwu.fn@gmail.com
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