A Lenten Blog for You
I can only imagine what those forty days must have been like.
There he sat, stood, walked, slept and prayed, alone in the wilderness.
When I think of wilderness I think of wild animals, thick vegetation, so thick that at night, you really can’t see anything. I ask myself, could I have done it? Could I have fasted and prayed for forty days in a place that is foreign to me being tempted by desires that would distract me from God and prevent the Kingdom to happen?
Yet, no matter what was thrown at him and no matter how scary it may have been, for forty days, he committed himself to God, fasting and praying and reflecting, all the while preparing for what was to come.
Jesus examined his life and through these particular practices of prayer and fasting, experienced the mysteries of God. We too have the opportunity to engage in the same journey which Christ took and begin to allow room for us to listen to the questions God is asking us. During this season of Lent, I want to invite you to walk with Jesus through his life, ministry and death, and listen closely to the questions he asks you and I. This Lend, may we tend to our spiritual health by practicing in disciplines that will be the drive us this season and which will bring us, the weary spiritual traveler to the joys of Easter.
As you may come to discover, Lent is a time when people often times give something up for Lent. This being a way for people to set aside those things that perhaps prevents them from being aware of the movements of God in their lives and they make a commitment to God. Lent is a time where people evaluate their lives and become more sensitive to the sin in their lives, as mentioned above. It is important though to make sure we balance this time with the awareness of sin in our lives with the remembering of God’s love and acceptance for us and our humanity.
“Jesus came into Galilee proclaiming the good news of God and saying, ‘The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news’” (Mark 1.14,15). Indeed these are the beginning words for the season of Lent. As we find ourselves on this Ash Wednesdays with the sign of the cross on our heads in ash, may we hear the good news, “repent and believe in it” and be made whole in Christ. Let not these conversions stop here but let us allow it to overflow itself into Easter season, the season of new life and celebration! May we remember the original meaning of Lent, as the ver sacrum, the Church’s “holy spring” and see Lent now as a season of punishment but one of healing, for it is the start of the great Easter cycle!
For forty days we are in this season of Lent. I encourage you to think of ways in which you can grow more intimate with God. My hope again, is that you will become overwhelmed with the love God has for your and decide to become a follower of the Way without any hesitations. Come to accept your own death as holy and how God has sanctified it but renew your gratitude to God for the new life that lies in Christ. In what ways, as Thomas Merton put it, do you consider Lent to be a “season of celebration?”
Peace to you all.


