Giving Up Our Secrets...
This new article by our General Superior, Sr Anne Marie Walsh, is outstanding and so true on every level.
My prayer is that, as you read it, the Holy Spirit will work in you through it.
God bless you-
My prayer is that, as you read it, the Holy Spirit will work in you through it.
God bless you-
Giving Up Secrets
People seem to have a
lot of secrets these days. We could
almost say we live in an age of secrets.
Governments have become skilled at keeping secrets; businesses are adept
at the same thing. Institutions, whether
they be educational, medical or religious, all keep secrets for both good
reasons and not so good reasons. But
this reflects people in general. People
tend to keep a lot of secrets.
There is a pressing need
to recognize that secrets make a difference.
They can determine the direction of our lives, and the manner in which
we pass from this world into the next.
For whatever reason, people today seem to have more secrets than
ever. They have secret activities,
secret wounds, secret weaknesses, secret sins, secret fantasies, secret
lives. People have secret thoughts,
secret addictions, secret jealousies, secret plans, secret ambitions, family
secrets, secret judgments, secret desires…secrets without number, secrets we
keep even from ourselves.
Few of us can admit to
being ready for heaven when we consider that in heaven, our insides will show
on the outside. Nothing will be
hidden. Everything will be
transparent. Transparency here would
completely change our image. And because
we are often not willing to change, we keep secrets.
At the same time, even
though we hide things about ourselves, we
have a certain affinity for, or attraction to the secrets of
others. There is almost nothing people
like better than hearing a good secret.
Why? There are several
reasons. One, it diverts attention away
from our own secrets. But we also love
secrets because we love hidden knowledge.
We live in a state of being that is still looking for something that
hasn’t been completely revealed to us yet.
We’re searching, whether we know it or not, for the one Word, so to
speak, that will answer all of our questions and give sight to the vision, the
understanding we seek.
The devil knows this
about us. Would that people understood
that the devil has to penetrate the world of knowledge by study and observation
too (albeit with a superior intelligence,) and that he perverts what he knows
to his own ends. Those ends are not full
of happy consequences for human souls.
He is interested in
luring people away from the real light.
He does it with promises of hidden knowledge, just as he did in the
Garden of Eden. (This is one of the most
lucrative marketing techniques around.
Money rolls in when you claim to have the secret to long life, to
health, to beauty, to success. This is also
one of the reasons professional gossips, psychics and clairvoyants prosper in
our culture today. People want to know
those secrets.)
We on the other hand,
have the source of all knowledge, the fount of pure Wisdom and Light in God
Himself. And we have been given, in
Jesus Christ, and through His Church, a direct line to that source, Who is for
us, our true Father (the Father of all lights). The temptations of some dark
meddler should never cause us to turn our glance away from our Good Father, as
our first parents did in the Garden, and as we so often do in our own lives.
Interestingly enough,
Jesus mentions that the Father Himself keeps secrets from the “wise and
learned” and reveals things to the “little ones.” Why is that?
(This might have been a good question for Adam and Eve to have asked as
they were being tempted to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and
evil.) We know most certainly that God
never does anything without good reason, and a reason that redounds, often in
mysterious ways, to our greatest benefit.
Might it be that God
protects the sacred and hides divine treasures for our sake? Anyone who has
studied covenant knows that profaning the sacred is dangerous. We can be destroyed by our profanation. A simple look at the human wreckage
surrounding the modern desecration of the gift and mystery of sexuality
confirms this.
In other words, could it be that just as Jesus
told us not to cast pearls before swine, He follows His own counsel with
us? He puts His treasure in safe
places…He is careful with what is precious beyond measure. And at the same time He is merciful to those
of us who would have a terrible accounting to give for squandering a poorly
understood gift, if we received it and did not really appreciate or care for
it.
Secrets like this can be
a good thing; in fact they can be a very good thing if their purpose is to
protect a treasure (whether that be jewels or a reputation) from vandalism or
theft, misuse or destruction.
But some secrets should
never be kept. And unfortunately, people
usually have more of these kinds of secrets.
We pay a price for many
of the secrets we keep. We can safely
say, I think, that many of the sicknesses of our age are determined by the
secrets we keep. This is well known in the
world of addiction and co-dependency:
“We are only as sick as our secrets.”
This is actually a psychology that was first explicated in the Sacred
Scriptures. Psalm 32 says: “I kept it secret and my frame was wasted…”
The distress, the groaning, the anxiety, the depression, the disturbance of so
many today more often than not comes from holding secrets that should not be
kept.
St. Paul mentions this
relationship between spiritual realities and physical consequences. He says, in 1Corinthians, 11:29: “For anyone who eats and drinks without
recognizing the body of the Lord eats and drinks judgment on himself. That is why many among you are weak and sick,
and a number of you have fallen asleep.”
With the rising tide of illnesses in our age, we await a physician who
will make this connection and diagnose the real cause of so many of the
physical and psychological disorders of our day.
I know a woman who
struggled with terrible depression much of her adult life, watched Mother
Angelica faithfully, but would not take the secret of her abortion to the
Confessional. She died recently and my
prayer is that before she died she finally released her secret into the loving
mercy of God so she could enter her heavenly home with “joy and an upright
heart.” Her secret certainly didn’t keep
her in peace or bring happiness into her life.
In fact, it brought her to the verge of a mental breakdown.
So why do we keep the
secrets we do? This is a mystery really,
since we only fool ourselves in keeping these kinds of secrets. God is certainly not fooled. There is nothing
He doesn’t know about us. The story of
Ananias and Sapphira, found in the fifth
chapter of Acts, tells us exactly what can happen when we dissemble before
God. They pretended (to the Lord, as St.
Peter points out) that they were giving everything to the community of
believers, when in fact they retained a portion for themselves which they could
have rightfully retained if they had chosen to.
After St. Peter had spoken, Ananias, and later his wife Sapphira (who
arrived late and was questioned separately) both died on the spot, apparently
for attempting to deceive God.
Keeping secrets from God
is impossible, and it can be deadly! If
not immediately, then at our own judgments, when in our encounter with God Who
is pure Love and Light and Goodness, all that is hidden will be revealed. To our own overwhelming confusion we will
find ourselves suddenly naked before the Lord, rather than clothed in the
garments of grace He so freely and continually offers us, all because fear, or
attachment or pride kept us from giving up our secrets.
Does this mean we should
blurt out everything to everyone all the time, like they do on the tacky talk
shows that seem to pollute the air waves?
No. There is something inherently
debasing about psychologically disrobing in front of millions of people. There is something degrading about vomiting
up things in public that properly belong in a counselor’s office and more often
in a Confessional where the justification, relief and redemption that people
are really seeking can be given.
This is really how
Saints actually begin to become Saints.
They get rid of their secrets. And they don’t lie to themselves about
who they really are. That is why they
are such shining examples of humility.
They know themselves in Truth, and it sets them free to soar to the
heights! They give their secrets, both their sins and their treasures, over to
God. He takes the sins, and in
Confession completely annihilates them, wills to remember them no more. They are gone, gone, gone, with no more power
to determine their life, and will never again reappear in accusation against
them, even at the end of time.
Never!
And then our Father does
an even more astounding thing. He
begins giving them "treasures out of the darkness and riches that have
been hidden away." Isaiah 45:3 He takes miserable secrets and begins to replace them with the secrets
He holds. What an exchange! The saints are no fools! They know this bargain is unmatched anywhere
in the whole universe. In the heart of
our Redeemer, we are given, by way of His own sacrificial love, infinite riches
in exchange for giving to Him our sinfulness, our pride, our imperfections, our
self-importance.
Great Confessors, like
St. John Vianney and St. Padre Pio spent themselves in this work of getting
people to give up their secrets so that they could begin to know the deep
things of God in their lives. There is
a reason the sacrament of Peace and Reconciliation is an Easter Sacrament. There is a reason that the Holy Spirit, Who
comes in Pentecost like a mighty wind to sweep out the secret and dark recesses
of our souls and fill them with fire and light, is the culminating gift of the
Easter season.
Our Blessed Mother, the
most pure creature who ever lived, was without secrets of her own. She kept only those God gave her. And because of that, there is none more
beautiful, more radiantly transparent in
the living of the Mysteries of the Most
Holy Trinity. In Her many apparitions in
the last centuries, we can hear the cry of our good Mother when she bids us
return to the Sacraments and live the Gospel way of life. One of the things She is saying with great
affection and urgency, as if speaking to a little child, is: “Run!
Run and whisper your secrets to your Father. All of them!
And be assured that He will give treasures out of the darkness and
riches that have been hidden away especially for you!”
Sr. Anne Marie Walsh, SOLT
General Sister Servant
5/6/2013
Comments
Thank you