The crowd gasped.
“Do you see?” the King said softly. “My weaver worked in darkness, but he held my pattern. What you call confusion, I call the shadow of glory. This is the lihim na karunungan — the hidden wisdom of God. From below, it seems like suffering, loose ends, and chaos. But from above, it is the masterpiece of salvation.”
The old weaver smiled and continued pulling his shuttle. “My son, my eyes are weak. I cannot climb to see the top with every stitch. But I hold the King’s pattern in my heart. He has seen the top side. I simply trust and weave from below.” lihim na karunungan ng diyos
We live on the underside of the loom. The hidden wisdom of God is that He works through what seems broken, delayed, or ugly to create a glory we cannot yet see. Faith is not about understanding every thread — it is about trusting the Weaver who sees the top side.
“Master Eliazar,” a young apprentice once asked, “why do you never look at the top side? Your work looks like a mistake from down here.” The crowd gasped
In a small mountain village, there lived an old weaver named Eliazar. He was known for creating the most beautiful fabrics in the kingdom, but his method was strange. He always wove from the underside of his loom.
From above, the tangled underside transformed into a stunning image: a royal garden with a river of gold, a tree of life bearing fruit, and a phoenix rising from ashes. What looked like random black threads from below was, from above, the deep outline of the phoenix’s wing. The grey knots became the roots of the tree. The jagged red cuts were the flames from which the bird arose. What you call confusion, I call the shadow of glory
One day, the King himself visited the village. The people rushed to show him their finest goods. Eliazar hesitated, ashamed of the ugly underside of his life’s work. But the King asked to see it.