Corrie ten Boom's Hidden Treasure
During the Nazi occupation of Holland, Corrie ten Boom and her family hid Jewish refugees in a secret room behind a false wall in their Haarlem watchshop. Every day, Corrie walked past German soldiers, served customers, and wound clocks as though life were ordinary. But her true life — the life that mattered most — was hidden behind that wall.
In February 1944, the Gestapo raided the Beje. They arrested Corrie and her family, but they never found the six people concealed in that tiny space. The hidden ones survived because their lives were tucked away where the enemy could not reach.
Paul tells the Colossians that their real life operates on exactly this principle. "You have died," he writes, "and your life is hidden with Christ in God." The powers of this world — its anxieties, its tyrannies, its relentless demands for allegiance — cannot touch what has been secured in the keeping of the Almighty. Our deepest identity is not on display for every passing inspection. It is held in Christ, as safe as those refugees behind the false wall.
But Paul adds a breathtaking promise: "When Christ who is your life appears, then you also will appear with Him in glory." The hidden life will not stay hidden forever. One day the wall comes down — not in a raid, but in a revelation. And everything concealed in God will shine.
Scripture References
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