There’s a thought that’s been growing on me as I read through Scripture, and it didn’t come all at once. It’s more like something you start to notice after seeing the same pattern show up in different places.
Not everything is revealed all at once.
That might sound obvious, but it changes the way you read the Bible.
A Pattern Begins to Show
When I started paying attention, I noticed something:
- In the beginning, truth is often given in a seed form
- Later, it’s expanded
- Eventually, it’s clearly revealed
It’s not random—it’s consistent.
A simple example is right at the start. There’s a promise given early on, but it’s not fully explained. You’re told what will happen, but not how, not when, and not all the details in between.
That’s the pattern.
Not Everything at Once
We tend to want everything laid out clearly:
- full explanation
- exact timeline
- no questions left
But Scripture doesn’t usually work that way.
Instead, it gives:
- enough to understand the direction
- enough to recognize fulfillment later
- but not always the full inner workings
And that’s where the phrase “manifold wisdom” really starts to make sense.
It’s like looking at something with many sides. You don’t see it all at once—you turn it, and more comes into view.
Why This Matters
This changes how you read difficult passages.
Instead of thinking:
“This doesn’t make sense”
You start asking:
“Is this something that wasn’t fully revealed yet?”
That shift alone clears up a lot of confusion.
Because sometimes the issue isn’t that the text is unclear—it’s that we’re expecting it to say more than it was meant to say at that point.
A Better Way to Read
What I’m learning (still working on it) is to separate:
- what is clearly stated
- what is implied
- what I might be adding without realizing it
That last one is where I usually trip up.
It’s easy to fill in gaps and then treat those assumptions like they were always there.
Where This Leads
If this pattern is real—and it seems to be—it means:
- earlier parts of Scripture may not show the full picture
- later parts don’t replace earlier truth—they reveal it more clearly
So instead of forcing everything to be fully explained at the beginning, it might be better to let it unfold the way it was given.
Final Thought
This isn’t about having all the answers.
It’s about recognizing that:
We’re often given the outcome and the promise…
but not always every step in between.
And maybe that’s intentional.