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			 The Revealed Wisdom of God: 
			Contrasting Divine Revelation with Human Reason 
			1 Corinthians 2:6–12 – Primary text 
			The Source of True Wisdom 
			Paul tells the Corinthians that 
			there are two kinds of wisdom: one is of this age and the 
			other is of God. The wisdom of the world is temporary and 
			limited. It is based on man’s reasoning, philosophy, and 
			speculation. But the wisdom Paul and the apostles speak is divine—it 
			is “the hidden wisdom which God ordained before the ages for our 
			glory” (1 Corinthians 2:7). This was God's eternal plan, not 
			something man could invent. 
			Human wisdom may solve worldly 
			problems, but it cannot uncover God's eternal plan of salvation. 
			God’s wisdom was hidden, meaning it could not be known unless 
			God chose to reveal it. 
			The Eternal Plan of 
			Redemption 
			God’s wisdom centers on the 
			gospel. Before the foundation of the world, He planned to send His 
			Son to redeem us (Ephesians 1:4; 1 Peter 1:18–20). This plan was not 
			a reaction—it was foreordained. Jesus Christ is the central figure 
			in that plan, and His death was no accident. 
			Paul writes, “which none of 
			the rulers of this age knew; for had they known, they would not have 
			crucified the Lord of glory” (1 Corinthians 2:8). They had 
			access to the Scriptures. They witnessed the miracles. Yet they 
			rejected Him, blinded by pride and expectations of a different kind 
			of Messiah. 
			Revealed, Not Imagined 
			Paul quotes Isaiah 64:4 to show 
			how mankind on its own could never conceive of God’s plan: “Eye 
			has not seen, nor ear heard, nor have entered into the heart of man 
			the things which God has prepared for those who love Him.” Many 
			apply this to heaven, but in this context Paul is speaking of the 
			blessings of the gospel. These things were prepared by God 
			but only revealed through the Spirit (1 Corinthians 2:10). 
			The Spirit searches all 
			things, even the deep things of God. Only the Spirit of 
			God can fully know the mind of God. Just as no one knows a man’s 
			thoughts unless the man reveals them, so also no one knows God’s 
			mind unless God reveals it. 
			The Role of the Holy Spirit 
			in Revelation 
			Jesus promised the apostles that 
			the Holy Spirit would come and guide them into all truth 
			(John 16:13) and bring to their remembrance all things (John 
			14:26). These promises were for the apostles—not for us directly. 
			The Holy Spirit gave them inspired knowledge so they could record 
			the New Testament. That’s how we know the things freely given to us 
			by God (1 Corinthians 2:12). 
			Today, the Spirit does not 
			directly whisper to us or implant thoughts in our minds. He speaks 
			through the written Word (Ephesians 6:17). The apostles and inspired 
			prophets were guided into all truth. Therefore, what we need 
			for life and godliness has already been revealed (2 Peter 1:3). No 
			one today is receiving new revelations. 
			The Futility of Human Reason 
			Alone 
			Man’s wisdom cannot comprehend 
			God’s plan. The philosophers of Corinth had plenty of ideas, but 
			none of them led to salvation. Human speculation can never replace 
			divine revelation. “Man cannot direct his own steps” 
			(Jeremiah 10:23). Without God revealing His will, we would be lost 
			in darkness. 
			There are hundreds of religious 
			groups today, each with its own doctrine, all claiming inspiration. 
			But the Holy Spirit does not teach contradictions. If people were 
			truly led directly by the Spirit, there would be only one faith and 
			one gospel (Ephesians 4:4–6). The confusion comes when people reject 
			the revealed Word and trust their feelings instead. 
			Conclusion 
			We are finite. God is infinite. 
			We could not imagine His plan—but we can know it because it has been 
			revealed. The apostles received the Spirit, who revealed the gospel. 
			That message is now written down. Our job is to read it, believe it, 
			and obey it. Only then can we benefit from the wisdom of God and be 
			saved through His eternal plan. 
			Sermon Outline: The Revealed 
			Wisdom of God: Contrasting Divine Revelation with Human Reason 
			Introduction 
			1 Corinthians 2:6–12 introduces a contrast between worldly wisdom 
			and God's revealed wisdom. 
			The gospel was hidden from man but revealed by the Spirit. 
			I. Two Kinds of Wisdom (v. 6–7) 
			Man’s wisdom: temporary, limited, and powerless to save. 
			God’s wisdom: eternal, hidden until revealed. 
			II. God's Plan Ordained Before 
			the Ages (v. 7) 
			Redemption planned before creation (Ephesians 1:4). 
			The cross was central, not accidental. 
			III. The Ignorance of Earthly 
			Rulers (v. 8) 
			They crucified Christ because they did not know Him. 
			Prejudice and pride blinded them. 
			IV. What Could Not Be Imagined 
			(v. 9–10) 
			Isaiah 64:4 applied to the blessings of the gospel. 
			These truths were revealed, not invented. 
			V. The Holy Spirit’s Work in 
			Revelation (v. 10–12) 
			Spirit knows the mind of God. 
			Spirit revealed all truth to the apostles (John 14:26; John 16:13). 
			We have the written Word inspired by the Spirit. 
			VI. Why Human Wisdom Fails 
			It cannot know God without revelation (Jeremiah 10:23). 
			Denominational confusion shows the need for one revealed truth. 
			Conclusion 
			We are limited, but God has made His will known. 
			The Spirit’s revelation is preserved in Scripture. 
			Our duty is to study, believe, and obey. 
			Call to Action 
			Will you trust in your own 
			understanding, or will you humbly receive the wisdom that God has 
			revealed through His Spirit? The plan of salvation is not hidden—it 
			is written plainly in the Word. Today is the day to submit to that 
			wisdom. Be taught by the Spirit—not through feelings or human 
			reasoning, but through the Word He revealed. Obey the gospel, and 
			you will share in the glory God prepared from the beginning. 
			Key Takeaways 
			
				- God’s wisdom was hidden 
				but revealed by the Spirit through the apostles (1 Corinthians 
				2:7–10).
 
				- Human wisdom alone 
				cannot uncover the plan of salvation (1 Corinthians 2:11–12).
 
				- The Holy Spirit guided 
				the apostles into all truth (John 14:26; John 16:13).
 
				- God’s Word is the 
				Spirit’s revelation, not man’s invention (2 Peter 1:20–21).
 
				- We must rely on 
				Scripture, not subjective feelings or worldly ideas (Jeremiah 
				10:23).
 
			 
			Scripture Reference List 
			1 Corinthians 2:6–12 – Primary 
			text on the contrast between God’s wisdom and man’s wisdom 
			Ephesians 1:4 – God’s plan was in place before the foundation of the 
			world 
			1 Peter 1:18–20 – Christ was foreordained before time began 
			Isaiah 64:4 – Prophecy referenced by Paul about what man cannot know 
			apart from revelation 
			Hebrews 9:15–17 – Christ’s sacrifice extends salvation to all time 
			periods 
			John 14:26 – The Holy Spirit would remind the apostles of Jesus' 
			words 
			John 16:13 – The Spirit would guide the apostles into all truth 
			2 Peter 1:3 – We have all things that pertain to life and godliness 
			Jeremiah 10:23 – Man cannot direct his own steps without God 
			Prepared by Bobby Stafford of 
			the church of Christ at Granby, MO 
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