On the
other hand, I’ve often experienced the joy of surprise as a result of whispering
and secrets keep? I can remember of a number of birthday parties as surprises. Whispers
that were plans to extend a kindness to me without me knowing. Whispers and secrets kept in a way to do good
deeds in secret without the very human desire to be publicly rewarded for that
good. I’ve found that holding or telling secrets can be good when the motivation
is to practice the discipline of secrecy.
The
other morning, I notice that Jesus talks a great deal about keeping things
secret. “Ah,” I said to myself, as I
read these words of the Sermon on the Mount: “But when you give alms, do not
let your left hand know what your right hand is doing…but when you pray, go
into your inner room, and pray to your Father who is in secret… but you, when
you fast, anoint your head and wash your face so that you may not be seen
fasting by men, but by your Father who is in secret.” In Jesus’s kingdom, there
seems to be something to be said for keeping secrets, especially when those
secrets nurture humility and protect me from the pride that comes from public
life of righteous living.
I thought I had remembered Dallas Willard saying in his book: The Spirit of the Disciplines is “One of the greatest fallacies of our faith, and actually one of the greatest acts of unbelief, is the thought that our spiritual acts and virtues need to be advertised to be known. That secrecy, rightly practiced enables us to place our public relations department entirely in the hands of God. And that we allow him to decide when our deeds will be known and when our light will be noticed.” Then he goes on to say that if I will desire godly secrecy, that love and humility before God will develop to the point that I’ll not only see my friends, family, and associates in a better light, but I’ll also develop the very Christian virtue of desiring their good above my own. Paul expresses this very truth to the Philippian church when he told them in 2:3-4 to “do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind regard one another as more important than yourselves; do not merely look out for your own personal interests, but also for the interests of others.”
Is this
why Jesus urged many who He healed not to reveal his identity? Is this why Jesus
avoided the crowds and would often go off to “lonely places” to pray? Is this
why my friend folds his bill so tightly?
Father,
God, thank You again for incite these past few days that I can follow Jesus
more closely as His disciple by keeping secrets: secret piety, secret prayer,
and secret giving. And remember that You Who sees in secret will repay me. Amen