Tag: Lent

  • New life requires risk, trust

    Sunday's readings are filled with images of renewal – new birth, new life, new creation.  These images imply that God’s promise for new life entails God’s gift of a fresh start, freed from the restrictions of our past lives in order to enter a new relationship with God through the power of the Holy Spirit.

    Lent is a time for engaging our new life in Christ more deeply, risking new levels of trust.  The purpose of Lent is not to dwell on suffering, or to spend forty days bewailing our manifold sins and wickedness for the sake of feeling our pain.  Lent is about engaging in the ongoing process of renewal, regeneration, and new birth; it is about encouraging us to trust and to risk going forth and being sent out with the promise of new life.

    Lent may require us to “think outside the box” of piety and religiosity, just as Abram and Sarai had to break with their past, and Saul and Nicodemus the Pharisees with theirs.  The promises of God bear not only upon the future of our individual lives in relationship to God, but also upon the future of our parish, our diocese, and our Church as a whole

    To respond to the promise for new life means we have to be ready to redraw and rename the places on the journey.  When the ancient ones told the story of Abram and Sarai, they were also inscribing new place names and creating a new social geography on the territories of their migrations in company with God.

    God may be inviting us to rethink how we do Church in light of the socio-geographies of the times we live in.  When Saul the Pharisee became Paul the Apostle as we know him, he brought new words, images, and new community structures into being, “calling into existence things which do not exist,” by trustfully following Jesus into new life.

    Lent is for listening to that call in our own lives.  In the words of James Russell Lowell, “New occasions teach new duties, time makes ancient good uncouth.”  Lent is for careful thinking about how to step into the as-yet-unmapped future, to deepen our relationship to God, to trust the picture of new life in Christ, and for identifying the breaks with the past that we need to make in order to respond to the promises of God.

    Ron Short Signature

  • Fasting and Feasting During Lent

    Here's a wonderful way to keep a Holy Lent, by William Arthur Ward:

        •    Fast from judging others; Feast on the Christ dwelling in them.
        •    Fast from emphasis on differences; Feast on the unity of life.
        •    Fast from apparent darkness; Feast on the reality of light.
        •    Fast from thoughts of illness; Feast on the healing power of God.
        •    Fast from words that pollute; Feast on phrases that purify.
        •    Fast from discontent; Feast on gratitude.
        •    Fast from anger; Feast on patience.
        •    Fast from pessimism; Feast on optimism.
        •    Fast from worry; Feast on divine order.
        •    Fast from complaining; Feast on appreciation.
        •    Fast from negatives; Feast on affirmatives.
        •    Fast from unrelenting pressures; Feast on unceasing prayer.
        •    Fast from hostility; Feast on non-resistance.
        •    Fast from bitterness; Feast on forgiveness.
        •    Fast from self-concern; Feast on compassion for others.
        •    Fast from personal anxiety; Feast on eternal truth.
        •    Fast from discouragements; Feast on hope.
        •    Fast from facts that depress; Feast on verities that uplift.
        •    Fast from lethargy; Feast on enthusiasm.
        •    Fast from thoughts that weaken; Feast on promises that inspire.
        •    Fast from shadows of sorrow; Feast on the sunlight of serenity.
        •    Fast from idle gossip; Feast on purposeful silence.
        •    Fast from problems that overwhelm; Feast on prayer that [strengthens].

    —William Arthur Ward (American author, teacher and pastor, 1921-1994.)