Hidden in Darkness, Revealed in Light
1 Corinthians 4:1-5
"This is how one should regard us, as servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God. Moreover, it is required of stewards that they be found faithful. But with me it is a very small thing that I should be judged by you or by any human court. In fact, I do not even judge myself. For I am not aware of anything against myself, but I am not thereby acquitted. It is the Lord who judges me. Therefore do not pronounce judgment before the time, before the Lord comes, who will bring to light the things now hidden in darkness and will disclose the purposes of the heart. Then each one will receive his commendation from God."
Paul is writing to a church drunk on human opinion; Corinthians were sizing up apostles like celebrity judges on a reality show. We see this sort of tribalism even today. Paul flips the script: We are not performers; we are stewards.
The word Paul uses is interesting: Servants (Greek hypēretas, under-rowers, it means galley slaves pulling oars in unison in the belly of a boat). And he says they are managers of God’s mysteries.
The only metric that matters is faithfulness, and even that verdict isn’t ours to render. Then he drops the bombshell: I don’t even trust my own judgment of myself. Radical honesty, not false humility. But here's the thing Paul is driving at, your conscience can be clear and your confession can still be blind. Motives can be mixed up without us knowing. The heart is a dark room until the Lord flips on the light switch.
Take a look at this:
Read Ezekiel 8:7-12
God doesn’t just tell Ezekiel about Israel’s idolatry; He makes him dig.
"Son of man, dig into the wall."
A hole. A door. A chamber. Seventy elders swinging censers before carved reptiles and beasts, each man in "the room of his own carved images" (8:12). They thought the dark hid them. They whispered, "The LORD does not see us."
But the wall was paper-thin to God.
The same God who walked Eden in the cool of the day now walks the hidden corridors of the hearts of men with a penetrating lantern light.
Three Hidden Things God Wants to Bring to Light Today:
1. The elders had public worship by day and private cravings by night. The "Acceptable" Idols. They were the teachers of exotic things. Not golden calves, but ambitions, comfort, and reputation.
What do you burn incense to in the dark when no one’s watching?
2. The Unexamined Motives, Paul refuses to self-acquit because he knows: We rationalize faster than we repent. He knows that the heart’s purposes are rarely pure on the first draft. Ask yourself: Why did I really post that? Serve in that way? Stay silent when I should speak?
3. And it's not all bad news. Not everything God wants to shine a light on is darkness. He wants to shine a light on faithfulness. Not every hidden thing is shameful. Some are quiet obediences no one claps for; prayers at 3 a.m., forgiveness texted without reply, generosity without credit. These too will be brought to light for commendation, not condemnation.
The Lord is the Archaeologist of the soul. Where we’ve buried bitterness behind busyness, He exposes. Where we’ve plastered over our pride with piety, He digs to reveal what's beneath our soul-skin. Where we’ve hidden holiness in the mundane, He rewards.
What "wall" is God asking you to dig through right now?
A conversation you’ve avoided? A habit you’ve renamed? A quiet act of obedience no one notices?
The light is coming. The Lord is near.
And when it does, may we be found faithful, not flawless, but faithful.
Closing Prayer
Lord,
Dig past our excuses.
Expose every hidden idol and motive.
Reward every quiet act of faithfulness.
Silence human judgment and our own.
Keep us faithful; not flawless.
When Your light comes, find us ready.
We trust the verdict to Your scarred hands.
In Jesus' holy name, Amen.