FIVE THINGS TO DO IN THIS LENTEN SEASON
Do you love Lent? I do, but a lot of folk don’t have all that much
affection for the season. Many Christians have come to think of it in
negative terms; however, Lent is not about hair shirts, solemn
countenances and the like. Rather, it is a positive, strengthening,
lovely spiritual experience, and if you want to grow in your love of God
and your neighbor, then Lent is for you! Here are five things to do
with single-mindedness this Lent which, if you do them, will give you a
clearer vision of the Risen Christ, come Easter.
FASTING & ABSTINENCE
The biggest problem we moderns have with fasting and abstinence is one
of confusion; that is, we don’t really understand them. The priest gets
up and talks about what they mean, and when he’s done, people are more
confused than they were when he started. So, here’s a simplified
elucidation of fasting and abstinence: Abstinence lowers the quality of
food (usually by not eating meat) and fasting lowers the quantity, and
usually means not more than a light breakfast, one full meal, and one
half meal daily each fast day.
Therefore, the rule is “keep it smaller and keep it simpler. ”
Smaller portions of food, and simpler menus. Don’t eat so much during
Lent. Not because you necessarily have to lose weight, but because the
practice will give you strength in your spiritual life by weakening the
attractions of the sensate pleasures. Fasting makes the waistline shrink
and the heart get larger, and abstinence makes the heart grow fonder.
Indulge in both fasting and abstinence during Lent, and you will have a clearer vision of the Risen Christ, come Easter.
PRAYING
For the forty days of Lent, start and end each day with prayer. Read
Morning and Evening Prayer and/or Family Prayer. Dust off that old grace
you used to say before eating – spend some table time in quiet
reflection and prayer instead of chattering and chomping. Pray daily,
making sure you indulge in all the qualities of Christian prayer –
adoration, thanksgiving, petition, penitence, and invocation.
Pray daily and you will have a clearer vision of the Risen Christ, come Easter.
BIBLE READING
Do this daily, also, and if you haven’t availed yourself of reading the
Daily Office of morning and evening prayer, you are missing out on the
opportunity the Church has given you for daily study and reading of Holy
Writ. There’s solace, insight, encouragement, grace and a whole lot
more in scripture, and that can’t be said about any other book in your
library. The Good Book is precisely that, and those who read it daily
learn how to be good – godly – themselves.
CORPORATE WORSHIP
Corporate worship is a basic Christian duty. Our prayer book puts it
succinctly, telling us that part of our bounden duty is to worship God
every Sunday in his Church. Doing so brings us understanding,
strengthens our faith, gives us hope, fills us with encouragement, and
gives us the first-hand experience of being loved by God – and that
gives us the ability to love others more fully. There is nothing we can
do on Sunday morning that is more important than being in God’s House
and being fed by His grace-filled presence in the Blessed Sacrament.
Make a commitment not to miss one single Sunday in God’s House this
Lenten season. Jesus told us to this do, (Luke 22:19; 1Cor 11:24-25) so
let’s do it together, every single Sunday, and you will have a clearer
vision of the Risen Christ, come Easter.
WORKS OF MERCY
The final step is to, as the prayer says, do all such good works as …
[God]…has prepared for us to walk in. There are fourteen ‘works” which
enable us to put our faith in Christ into action in our life. They are
both spiritual and temporal and are as follows:
Spiritual Works of Mercy
(1) converting the sinner, (2) instructing the ignorant, (3) counseling
the doubtful, (4) comforting the sorrowful, (5) bearing wrongs
patiently, (6) forgiving injuries, (7) praying for the living and the
dead.
Corporal Works of Mercy
(1) feeding the hungry, (2) giving drink to the thirsty, (3) clothing
the naked, (4) harboring the stranger, (5) visiting the sick, (6)
ministering to prisoners,
(7) burying the dead.
II
Finally, and no doubt most importantly, let your Lenten lapses and
failures – whatever they may be serve only to increase your dependence
upon God. None of us will do all we want to do during Lent. That’s the
human condition. The point is not to get a good grade; the point is to
increase your capacity to love God and your neighbor.
After all, Lent is a time to learn how to love – God’s way – once again. That’s the whole point of the season!
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