Don’t dread Lent, but make the best of its 40 days

573 0
Franciscan Brother Christopher Coppock burns last year's palms at the Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in Washington March 3, 2019. The ashes will be used for Ash Wednesday March 6. (CNS photo/Julie Asher)

WASHINGTON (CNS) — Long, orange flames consumed the palms Massgoers had brought in to Washington’s Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land March 3 to burn ceremonially before the noontime crowd that gathered for their last Sunday Mass before Lent.

“This is kind of a graphic reminder of how Lent starts: We make the ashes, we realize those ashes are a symbol of what happens to us — not the fire, by the way!” joked Father James Gardiner, a Franciscan Friar of the Atonement, to laughter from the crowd.

Early childhood memories may conjure up glum images of Lent, a time to give up things we loved for 40 days, but as adults, it’s time to put aside childish things, as Corinthians tells us, Father Gardiner said, and enter into Lent, not “dragging” but welcoming it as a spiritually rich period.

During his Sunday homily, Father Gardiner offered three tips to “make the best” of the Lent’s 40 days.

“Welcome Lent. Give it a chance, so to speak, to do what it’s intended to do: foster our ongoing conversion to the Lord as a result of our baptism into his life, death and glorious resurrection,” he said.

Conversion is not a once-in-a-lifetime event, he said, but a lifelong process that continues “until one’s last breath is drawn.” Lent, however, is “a stark warning not to delay further conversion to the Lord, especially when the ashes are imposed, accompanied by those ominous and unsettling words: ‘Remember that you are dust and to dust you shall return,'” he said.

“Second, remember prayer, fasting, almsgiving, and don’t make other people pay for what you’re giving up,” he said.

Instead of giving up material things, consider giving up certain practices that distract from hearing God’s voice, he said.

“I suspect God would be pleased with a break from our jabbering and we might be able to hear the voice of God who speaks most often in silence,” he said. “What if our fasting were to extend from food and drink to refraining from gossip, or from negative judgements about other individuals or groups, or from holding a grudge?”

Our almsgiving could include giving time and attention to others, even if we find them disagreeable, he said.  

And finally, become a living parable of Jesus, he said.

“You and I would do incredibly well to think of ourselves, individually and institutionally, as living parables, charged with credibly and compellingly connecting the Gospel of Jesus Christ with life as we know it,” he said.

And this is where the urgency and the words from the Book of Sirach come into play, he said: “Delay not your conversion to the Lord, put it not off from day to day.”

Related Post

Archbishop Angelo De Donatis, papal vicar for the Diocese of Rome, holds a copy of Pope Francis' exhortation, "Gaudete et Exsultate" ("Rejoice and Be Glad"), during a news conference on the exhortation at the Vatican April 9. The document is on the "call to holiness in today's world." (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Holiness means being loving, not boring, pope says

Posted by - April 14, 2018 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — God calls all Christians to be saints — not plastic statues of saints, but real people…
Natasa Govekar, director of the theological-pastoral department of the Vatican's Secretariat for Communication, is pictured in her office at the Vatican March 21. Govekar said church communications involves creativity. "You can never just cut and paste from the past and, even less, from the world." (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Make way for the Gospel: Vatican ensures media give the message

Posted by - March 30, 2017 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — As the Vatican Secretariat for Communication works to unify Vatican media efforts, a key pastoral concern…
Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden speaks Oct. 26, 2019, at the Second Step Presidential Justice Forum at Benedict College in Columbia, S.C. Biden attended morning Mass Oct. 27 at St. Anthony Church in Florence and was refused Communion by the pastor, Father Robert E. Morey, over Biden's support for legal abortion. (CNS photo/Sam Wolfe, Reuters)

Biden denied Communion at Mass during stop in South Carolina

Posted by - November 2, 2019 0
FLORENCE, S.C. (CNS) — Former Vice President Joe Biden attended the 9 a.m. Mass at St. Anthony Church Oct. 27…