Instead of making decisions to change our normal activities during Lent, many
seem satisfied to continue life as in any other period. They go to church on
Sunday, they don't participate in the additional Lenten services,
their social life proceeds as normal, and they even ignore the fast.
What does it mean to
take Lent seriously? It means we engage in it whole heartedly as a
spiritual challenge and opportunity. This means we make special plans to make
an extra effort during this period. We can think of this period as a gift of
God encouraging us to seek ways to perfect ourselves, to make changes in our
way of life, to be renewed and deepen our spirituality. It is a period intended
for Repentance and change.
We are prepared by the
themes of the Sundays precede Lent: the desire of Zacchaes to repent, the
humility of the Publican, the welcomed return of the Prodigal Son , of the
Final Judgment we will all face, and the need and power of forgiveness.
Meditate on these Gospel lessons (Publican and the Pharisee (Luke
18:10-14); Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11-32); Judgment (Meat-fare) Sunday (Matt
25:31-46); Forgiveness (Cheese-Fare) Sunday (Matt 6:14-21). Combined, they
provide the foundation for the right motivation during Lent.
Next, we find on the
church calendar many additional services. If we are serious about Lent we will
make plans to participate in them, increasing our time devoted to prayer. This
requires a decision and extra effort. The main services are the Presanctified
Liturgy on Wednesdays and the Salutations on Friday evenings.
Of course there is also
fasting to go along with our additional time in prayer. Without fasting you
cannot say there is Lent. To understand its importance review the story of Adam
and Eve. Their transgression involved eating against God’s will. Also the first
act of Christ when he began His public ministry was a 40 day fast. Food is
central to life. Without it there is biological death. We tend to think of the
essentials of life only in terms of nourishment, but we must lift our thoughts
to consider a higher life which depends on God instead of food. In fasting we
are reminding ourselves of the great truth, life is not dependent on bread
alone but on God. The problem for Adam was that he ate for his own sake, to be
independent of God, thinking the fruit of the tree would make him like God.
Adam in disobeying Gods command to not eat of this fruit lost eternal life.
Christ came to restore what had been lost. He began with a fast. It says in
Scripture, "When He had fasted forty days and forty nights, He became
hungry" (Matt 4:2). Hunger makes us realize that we are dependent on
something more than what we have in ourselves. It raises the important
question, What does my life depend on? With fasting we face the temptation
Christ faced during His fast. When he rejected it He said, “It is written (Deuteronomy
8:3), ‘Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from
the mouth of God.’” (Matt 4:4). He restored the relationship between food, life
and God. By fasting we enter into that experience Christ had and with the
understanding that life is dependent on more than food. The life we seek is
eternal and depends on God. When fasting we can experience food as a gift from
God and realize how our life in this world and the next world are dependent on
Him. It is through fasting that we can recover the realization of our spiritual
nature. We denounce the temptations that come when we are hungry or not able to
satisfy a desire for a certain kind of food. We develop inner strength against
temptations. When combined with prayer we experience the victory of Christ over
evil. We learn that our greater hunger is a hunger for God. This is why our
fast in Lent is also coupled with additional prayer services. To be serious about
Lent is to be serious about our salvation and our desire to be united with God.
In preparing for our fast we must think about more that the "rules"
of fasting. It is not enough to simply follow the "rules." The fast
must be God centered. It must be viewed as something to help us discover our
body as the Temple of His presence. True fasting will lead us to
temptation, discomfort, showing us our weakness and raising doubts. Lent is
long enough to test our resolve, our endurance and perseverance which are
all necessary to follow the path to union with Christ.
If we are serious about
Lent, we also make modifications in our way of life during Lent. We brace
ourselves to go against the grain of our modern materialistic and self-centered
culture that ignores most religious traditions and efforts. If we are
serious about Lent we will choose not to follow the norm. We will instead reduce
our level of activity to make room for silence and inner reflection. We should
reduce the use of TV, internet surfing, video watching and games, as well as
other forms of entertainment and pastimes. This does not have to be a complete
absence but a reduced one. We can watch the news and carefully select other
programming that is beneficial for our soul. We want to make more time for
spiritual reading, listening to spiritual talks, and prayer. We should try to
create an atmosphere in our homes that encourages spiritual enrichment during
this period. We want gain the experience of what is important for the true life
that comes from faith and a life lived by this faith.
Let's become serious
about Lent, let's attend the extra services, let's fast, let's reduce our
social activities, let’s limit our time spent on Internet surfing, videos and
games. Instead, lets make time for inner introspection that leads us to
repentance, nurturing our soul, and deepening or relationship with God.
Thank God for this
special time and do take Lent seriously.
Have a good and spiritual Lent.
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