Buechner, Lewis: Telling Secrets on New Year's Eve

“I have come to believe that by and large the human family all has the same secrets, which are both very telling and very important to tell.”

—Frederick Buechner in Telling Secrets (HarperOne, 1991), p. 2.

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In Telling Secrets, Buechner reminds us that we so often are like the dwarves in the stable in The Last Battle by C. S. Lewis. We do not see the good and do not realize that we are surrounded by beauty, but live trapped lives because of our dark secrets. We are as sick as our secrets and can get well only by airing these secrets, if only in our own hearts. Like the dwarves, we live our lives huddled together in what we think is a cramped, pitch-black stable where there is little room to breathe.

In reality, we are in the midst of an endless green meadow where the sun is shining and the sky is blue. Aslan himself (God) stands there offering freedom; but the dwarves cannot see him and only see each other.

We are our secrets. Our trusting each other enough to share these secrets has much to do with the secret of what it is like to be connected to the God within us, as well as honoring our humanness.

This last day of the calendar year is a good time to take inventory of what secrets we may be carrying into the new year that will keep us in the dark and block our deeper understanding of God within us, God in our neighbor, and God transcendent.

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Joanna . joannaseibert.com