| “Did
you hear about . . .” so began the phone conversation
where my husband informed me about the arrest of a clergy
person in suburb east of Dallas. No, I had not heard.
I had been experiencing a challenging work day and had
not turned listened to the news on the radio nor had
I read the morning paper thoroughly.
When
I did find the news reports, my insides began to churn.
A young clergyman had been arrested for trafficking
in child pornography over the Internet. He apparently
admitted that he was the person behind the screen name
used for the deed. It is possible we’ve seen just
the surface of a life lived with one foot in the world
of grace and hope and the other wallowing in horrific
and disgusting activities. Just the beginning of the
inevitable exposure of yet another person who thought
he or she could live a double life and get away with
it.
You,
and I, really, really can’t have it both ways.
We cannot live and work in positions of trust and be
systematically betraying that trust in our shadow lives.
People have tried this from the beginning of recorded
history. It might work for a while, perhaps even years.
But at some point, the light will overcome the darkness
and all will be exposed.
It’s
the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde syndrome: the good doctor
by day, serving, learning, experimenting; the nasty
destroyer at night, using the cover of darkness to release
the cruel and debased side of his personality. He was
eventually destroyed, as are all who try to live such
a decided double life and never reach the point of sorrow
and repentance because of it.
All
of us have a shadow side, the parts of us we’d
rather not come to light. Some, like the clergy man
mentioned above, choose to indulge their shadow side.
They become destroyers, and are especially destructive
to those who trust them most fully. Others seek awareness
of their shadow sides. They discover that by facing
it and courageously bringing it into a position of accountability
to others, it is possible to live in the light. They
become healers. It is a hard battle—only the foolish
and ignorant suggest any easy path to wholeness. But
we’ve all go the choice to make.
The most famous example of someone who gave into his
shadow side from the Bible was King David. This gifted
and wonderful king decided he could wantonly take another
woman, have her husband killed when a pregnancy resulted,
and just get away with it. After all, he was powerful
and had done much, much good for the nation. Surely
people would overlook this one little crossing of the
moral line.
But
God does not, nor ultimately can we ourselves. Those
choosing to hold onto the double life enter a vicious
downward cycle of self-hatred and self-indulgence, expending
massive amounts of energy covering their tracks, all
while trying so maintain exterior respectability and
trustworthiness. The drain on the soul increases with
each episode. Lying replaces truth, in time eventually
shoving truth out completely. The double life kills,
sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly. But it always kills.
That is its nature.
We
really can’t have it both ways. We can seek wholeness
and singleness. Those are other words for heaven, living
in the light of the saving grace of our Lord. Or we
can continue in duplicity and brokenness. Those are
other words for hell, which is separation from our God,
from our own souls and from those whom we say we love.
We really, really can’t have it both ways.
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