Look at your hand. Did you notice it manifests a pattern of creation which follows you around everywhere you go? Or, look at a flower pedal or these plants. Completely different plants laying before us a clue to the true principles they are showing. The fives which surround us are everywhere. Look for them. Observe, Explore, Ask and Discover them! What do they represent? Are they perhaps there as a reminder for us? A reminder of something greater than us?
A story teaching these principles came to my mind while I was preparing to teach my Ten Boom class this past week.
Two Fives. Same trail. Different Plants. |
To give you some background into this story, in an ancient Jewish wedding, there were two agreements. The first agreement entered the bride and groom to into a contract which bound them to each other until the day of their future wedding feast and second agreement. When the long awaited day finally came, the family and friends gathered with their candles lit to anticipate the bridegroom's arrival under his canopy, and to follow him to the wedding feast. Each member of the wedding party was to carry their own lamps filled with enough oil to last throughout the procession and join the bride and groom's in their wedding feast and final agreement.
There were Five That Were Wise and five that were foolish. Ten ladies were invited to a wedding feast. They were to keep their lamps trimmed and fueled until the bridegroom arrived. The only problem was, they would not know the exact time of his arrival. Some spent all their fuel, others preserved enough always. In a time they knew not, the bridegroom arrived. The ten had divided themselves in two groups of five. The five that were fueled sufficiently, had kept their promise as wedding guests.Those Five That Were Wise give us a clue about fives in creation. To be included in the wedding feast they were to keep their promise to keep the oil in their lamps. The bridegroom would keep his and come. Now, could creation in plants and man really be showing us the same message?
Another story showing us this pattern is about a man once named Abram. He followed the course of the Pilgrim and, one day, made a covenant with his God. Because of this covenant, his God added a five to his name. It became Abra-hei-m (when written in Hebrew, one meaning of hei is five), so he and all his descendants would know of the covenant or two-way promise, his God made with him; the covenant he made with his God.
Let me ask again. Could the fives in the plants and man be showing us a similar pattern? Could they be a reminder to us of the privilege we call life? And breath? Of the two-way promise we made to return?
The fives which surround us are everywhere. Look for them. Observe, Explore, Ask and Discover them! I challenge you to Discover the five and rejoice.
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