If you would confide in a friend and really open up your
heart, you wait until such a time as your friend can take time to come apart and be alone
with you. So they who would know the secret and hidden things of God and have Him
"expound all things," must find time to be alone with Him. Such is the
philosophy of love; while there may be the throbbing heart, and some expressions of
affection in the presence of the multitudes, the hour of true bliss is when the doors are
closed and the curtains drawn. It is there that love finds her opportunity for expression,
and the confiding heart gives forth its secrets. The intensity of love demands the secret
interview and longs for an opportunity of being alone with the object of its love. We read
of "the secret place of the Most High" (Ps. 91:1), and "the secret of the
Lord is with them that fear Him" (Ps. 25:14). So we can see plainly the Lord has
secrets and a secret place for His children. How beautiful it is to feel and know that one
is permitted to come into "the secret place of the Most High." Visitors and
strangers come into reception halls and parlors, but only they who are in most intimate
relations known to be tried and true can come into the secret places. What is the meaning
of a secret place, but the shutting out of all that might intrude or detract; to be left
alone with the object of its love? Again we say, the deepest expressions of mutual
affection, confidence and pleasure are not in public assemblies, in hurried greetings and
mere social relations, but in the "secret place," alone and unobserved.
It is exactly so in our relations to
Jesus. Men and women who fail to take time to be much "alone" in the "secret
place" with Jesus, are never deeply spiritual and are compelled to get their
news concerning the kingdom second-hand. They know simply what the preacher or
some one else tells them; they are ever running after men -the newest preacher
and the latest evangelist- to get some more news, second-hand, concerning the
King's business. But they who have learned the "secret" of being much alone with
Him in the secret Place, get the secrets of the Lord directly from the King
himself and so are not dependent on the newspapers for the latest news. No
amount of religious activities or service can make up for the lack of secret
communion and fellowship with God. Joseph and Mary had been engaged in the
worship and service of the Temple when they lost Jesus, and traveled a whole
day's journey "supposing Him to have been in the company" before they discovered
they had lost Him. One may become so absorbed with religious work and duties, so
hurried and preoccupied that there is no time for secret prayer, and being alone
with Him and the Word, and become lean in soul and backslide while thus engaged
in the work of the "Temple".