As I was receiving the blessing and distribution of ashes earlier
this week on Ash Wednesday, I felt compelled to offer some thoughts
for your Lenten Journey with a weekly reflection.
Lent is a time of reckoning – a
spiritual reckoning before God. In a sense, the Season of Lent is a
sort of a trial run each year which prepares us for meeting our Maker
and having to give an account for our life in the flesh. That’s a holy
and salutary thing for us to do, and our Church provides us this
immense grace-filled season for that reason.
That’s why it’s good to have a plan
for it and to make a firm intention at the beginning not to waste this
phenomenally rich season of grace. How will we derive maximum benefit
from this season of preparation?
First, begin with the end in mind. Remember for what we prepare, or rather,
for Whom. The biblical forty days’ journey reminds us of Christ’s own
forty days in the desert and prepares us for His Death and
Resurrection at the end, the high holy days of the only week in the
year we call “Holy”.
We can surely spend a little time
in a "desert" of self-renunciation, fasting, and prayer to get our
souls ready to enter into the Paschal Mystery at the end of Lent.
Acts of self-denial are not ends in themselves; they are
means to the end of becoming more spiritual men and
women.
Second, stay simple. Namely, don't load yourself down with too
many spiritual exercises or intentions that may discourage you by
running too quickly into the desert. I am all for heroism in religious
practices, but we have to be humble about the power of the flesh to
undermine our best efforts and also realistic about our
limitations.
This is why the Church gives us
minimal and, quite frankly, relatively easy penitential practices in
Lent: required fasting is only on two days (Ash Wednesday and Good
Friday.) These won't kill anyone – guaranteed! Abstinence from meat is
only on Ash Wednesday and the Fridays of Lent (a modest inconvenience
for any active person.) You can always go above and beyond these
duties, of course, but first make sure you and your loved ones
practice the minimal requirements diligently.
Finally, go for strong spiritual
impact. This means that
you should identify and practice faithfully just one really
magnificent spiritual goal for your personal conversion this Lent. I
say conversion and not "personal improvement" so that no one will
interpret Lenten discipline as a chance to lose weight or quit
smoking! We must go deeper than that.
What Lent demands of us is to look
into our slothful and petty nature and challenge it with the full
prophetic force of the Gospel. Jesus described John the Baptist as one
who "took the Kingdom by storm." This is what a focused spiritual goal
means: identifying an area of your life that you have not surrendered
to God – and taking it by storm.
Is there a primary vice you
struggle with (no one is without one)? Time to root it out. Or,
evaluate your practice of the theological virtues: faith, hope, and
charity. Are you lacking in any one of these? Take it by storm this
Lent! Or, look honestly at how you live the cardinal virtues:
prudence, justice, temperance, fortitude. Go all-out to develop the
virtue you need most. Have a plan.
A single, firm intention to convert
your heart is worth more than a thousand acts of well-intentioned
piety that bring no interior change.
Those who resolve to walk through
Lent with these intentions will not waste Lent. In fact, they will
reap the benefit of deep conformity to Christ when we finally arrive
at the High Holy Days of our blessed Faith.
Your friend in Christ
Thomas J McKenna http://www.catholicaction.org/
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