For years I've had a love-hate relationship with Lent. There were years I'd actually look forward to
those preparatory weeks leading to Holy Week and Easter. I'd anticipate times set aside for silent
prayer and meditation as I would engage - sometimes alone, sometimes with
others - in Lenten disciplines of silence and prayer. However, there were those other years...
years when I wouldn't quite dread Lent, but I clearly did not look forward to
it. I remember once even describing Lent
as "the ecclesiastically sanctioned liturgical season of depression." I know.
Harsh, wasn't it?
The challenge of Lent for me, especially during those years
when God would seemingly have to drag me into the season, is that it really is
a time when we're asked... invited... charged to face ourselves. We're called to follow Jesus into the desert,
where we must candidly look at ourselves without the pretenses in which we
sometimes clothe ourselves.
Lent is the season of the Church year during which we are
summoned to more intentionally follow Jesus.
That is hard, partly because we know that Jesus' path led to the
cross. That also is hard because, in the
desert, Jesus had to face his own fears, his human frailty, his mortality. So during Lent, as we are called to walk in
"The Jesus Way" (to borrow the title of Eugene Peterson's powerful
book), we are called to strip away all the superficial veneer in our lives and
be brutally honest and vulnerable... with ourselves... before God.
This Wednesday will be the first time in decades that I will
not stand before a worshiping congregation and invite people into the Lenten
journey. However, I still am moved - and
challenged - by these words from our Book of Common Worship:
Friends in Christ,
every year at the time of the Christian Passover we celebrate our redemption
through the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. Lent is a time to
prepare for this celebration and to renew our life in the paschal mystery. We
begin this holy season by acknowledging our need for repentance, and for the
mercy and forgiveness proclaimed in the gospel of Jesus Christ.
We begin our
journey to Easter with the sign of ashes. This ancient sign speaks of the
frailty and uncertainty of human life, and marks the penitence of this
community.
I invite you,
therefore, in the name of Christ, to observe a holy Lent by self-examination
and penitence, by prayer and fasting, by works of love, and by reading and
meditating on the Word of God.
The invitation is extended... to each of us. Let the journey begin again.
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