WHEN Christ
complained against the Pharisees about their hypocrisy with these words: “Now
you Pharisees make clean the outside of the cup and of the platter, but your
inside is full of rapine and iniquity,” (Lk 11,39) we are strongly reminded of
the danger of hypocrisy that can easily enter into our lives. We should be
ready to protect ourselves from it, but learn also how to differentiate it from
our need for discretion in our lives.
That’s because
hypocrisy and discretion can appear to have certain things in common. Some
hiding is involved in both conditions. But the former certainly is an anomaly
while the latter is a necessity in our life. The former goes against sincerity,
truthfulness and consistency. The latter seeks to protect the truth that can
easily be misunderstood by those who are not yet prepared to accept it.
Of course, the
only way for us to be able to differentiate between the two is for us to be
truly united with God. Yes, only with him can we have the power to avoid
hypocrisy even as we need to live discretion in certain situations in our life.
Nowadays, with
the plethora of data and information, we have to remind ourselves constantly
that truthfulness is not simply a matter of conforming these data and pieces of
information to our own designs. We need to process these raw data by leavening
them with the love of God and submitting them to God’s will.
To put it
bluntly, we can only be in the truth when we are with God. Outside of him,
let’s wish ourselves sheer luck, because the most likely thing to happen is to
slip from the truth. It´s like chasing the wind. For all the excitement and
advantages a Godless pursuit of truth gives, everything will just turn out to
be vanity.
And so, prayer
is a must. It’s what vitally and existentially unites us with God. Without it,
we will just be on our own, an easy prey to our own weaknesses, let alone, the
temptations around.
Very vulnerable
to the temptation to distort the truth and to fall into the tricks of hypocrisy
and pretension are persons endowed and favored with all sorts of talents,
intelligence, position, power and who may already have attained a good level of
sanctity. That’s because their situation attracts all sorts of temptations.
This was what
happened to the Pharisees of Christ’s time. They were the privileged people of
the time, occupying prominent positions. Sadly, they were blinded by their
so-called privileges that led them to miss the very personification of truth
himself—Christ.
We should
regularly examine ourselves to see if we are still with God, guided by the
faith he shares with us, or we are already relying on our own human powers
alone, that can only do so much.
To distinguish
between hypocrisy and discretion would require us to have a proper
understanding of what truth is, where to find it and how to find it. It is also
a matter of how and when to present it.
It also involves
the question of motives. Truthfulness and discretion are not just a matter of
producing facts and data, blabbering them indiscriminately. They necessarily
have to consider the intentions and the circumstances also.
Most
importantly, truthfulness and discretion will always uphold charity even if in
a given moment such effort would involve a lot of sacrifice. It’s charity that
would dictate the terms of discretion in telling the truth. Hypocrisy fails in
this requirement.
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