Lent 2015
FROM THE RECTOR’S
DESK
In my pastoral role, I call each of
you to observe a holy Lent. I recall, from several years ago, a woman who began
attending a church I served in Arizona .
She was in her eighties, and had grown up in the Episcopal Church. She had
lived through many incremental changes over the years, watching as her denomination
turned into something unrecognizable, but slowly enough to have the effect of
boiling a frog alive; the frog does not notice the steady rise in heat, and so
remains in the water until it is too late.
This woman came to us in Lent of that
year. After several weeks she asked why the services seemed so serious and sober.
Why was it not more upbeat? She had forgotten what Lent is.
I do not blame her. It is the times in
which we have been living, with that slowly creeping metamorphosis that has
created a modern religion, one that emphasizes a warm and fuzzy feeling of
inspiration. In the modern world, going back a while even to the days of my
youth, the assumption and prejudice has been that anything old must always give
place to what is new. For this reason the experimental and untried takes
precedence over all that is tried and true, that has withstood the test of
time, and that passes on wisdom.
And, as I am made aware by the
intrusion of a loud media culture, Lent simply has no place in much of popular
modern religion. A season that begins with the Penitential Office on Ash
Wednesday, emphasizing, for its duration, repentance, fasting, and giving to
the poor, culminating in the suffering and sorrows of Christ Himself during
Holy Week, lacks that emphasis on entertainment and fun we have all too often
come to expect and demand. It has no sizzle!
But, observing this very serious
season is what the Church has done since ancient times. It prepares us for the
joy of Easter. It calls us to look inwardly day by day, and to call on the Lord
to cleanse and purify our hearts by His grace, and does so in a way that flashy
show-biz religion cannot do. It teaches us to look death squarely in the face,
and in doing so proclaims to us, especially as Easter takes over, that it is death,
not life, that ultimately is fleeting. In serious recognition of the frailty of
human reality, with the knowledge of God and His eternal promises, sober Lenten
reflection banishes the terror of the grave from the hearts of all faithful
people.
Happiness, by its modern definition of
nothing more than an emotion, is dependent always on what happens. Joy, however, endures even in the midst of sorrow, has an
eternal quality, and looks beyond the things of this world for its sure and
certain hope.
So, I feel sorry for those who have
abandoned the observance of Lent. They may excuse themselves from serious
reflection, choosing instead the temporary feeling they call “happiness.” But,
in the long run, they do not prepare their hearts to face reality with he joy
of faith, and without fear.
2 comments:
Fr. Hart,
1. When I pray morning and evening prayer, after the confession, do I pass the Declaration of Absolution and go to the Our Father?
2. Is it permissible to substitute the lessons and psalms of the prayer book with the readings and psalms of The St. James Daily Devotional Guide (Touchstone Magazine) that I am currently using?
Thank you in advance for answering these questions.
SgK
The absolution is spoken only by a priest. As for your private daily prayers, read what works best for you. I like the thirty day cycle because it gets them all in.
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