Posted on 02/25/2009 11:27:24 AM PST by NYer
As we get ready for another Ash Wednesday, and another 40-day sojourn into the desert, the Arkansas Catholic has this intriguing item reminding us that Lent is not just a Catholic thing anymore:
Beginning Ash Wednesday, Catholics enter the 40-day penitential season of Lent, but they are not the only Christians to do so. In fact, a growing number of Christian denominations are incorporating Lenten observances into their Christian experience.Check the link for more. (And, by golly, that picture above looks like a Methodist minister wearing a deacon's stole, doesn't it? )
"In some denominations we are reclaiming a sense of history," Dr. Jane Harris, professor of American religion at Hendrix College in Conway, said. "We can still be Protestant yet claim liturgical practices."
Harris gave two reasons to explain why more churches, including some American Baptist churches, although none in Arkansas, now follow a liturgical calendar and observe Lent.
First, she said, many churches want to recognize the rich history of the liturgical calendar.
"Observing church seasons add elements of depth and life to the congregation to spiritually enrich us," she said.
Secondly, society has diminished the spiritual elements of holidays.
"Advent and Lent slow us down and take us away from the commercialism and allow us to prepare for the high holy days of Christmas and Easter," she said.
In fact, Lent is all about preparation. While the word "Lent" means "spring," the season of Lent for many Christians is marked by a concentrated focus on prayer and a sacrifice either by giving something up or taking something on, Harris said.
"During Lent, we know that for 40 days everything is going to be different," Father Nicholas Verdaris, pastor of Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Little Rock said. "It is about altering our way of life to allow more time for prayer."
Father Verdaris said there are special services only done during Lent and include prayer along with communion and act to fortify the spirits of the faithful.
Followers of the Orthodox Church do not eat meat and sometimes extend that prohibition to dairy for the entire 40 days of Lent, Father Verdaris said.
He also said no weddings are performed during Lent and except for funerals, no other sacraments are celebrated.
In addition, he said the Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church use the same formula in determining Easter, but they apply it differently. The Catholic Church follows the Gregorian calendar and the Orthodox Church uses the Julian calendar. Additionally, for Orthodox Christians, Lent begins on Clean Monday, not Ash Wednesday and Easter begins at midnight on Easter Sunday. Father Verdaris said there have been many disappointed people who come to the Orthodox Church on Easter Sunday only to find a brief prayer service which includes brief hymns and no communion.
"We begin at 11 p.m. on Holy Saturday with candles and fill the church with light and praises of the resurrection and are up pretty late, similar to midnight Mass," he said.
Lenten ping!
Some of us evangelical Christians are not celebrating Lent, believing that it is not biblical. In fact, there is evidence that “Lent” is derived from the Mystery Religions of Babylon.
I am an Evangelical Christian. I choose to celebrate Lent. I sacrifice something to meditate on the Sacrifice Christ made for me.
A dear friend of mine *She is also an Evangelical Christian)and I choose for the other what we are giving up for Lent. We do this to hold each other accountable. This year I am giving up video games and she is giving up fiction. We have agreed that the time we would normally spend on these activities will be spent in prayer and Bible reading.
How unfortunate. Lent is a season of spiritual growth as we accompany our Lord’s into the desert and confront our own temptations with restraint.
Excellent! Several years ago, I gave up watching the major news channels. I was a news junkie and it was tough going for a few days. After 40 days, I realized just how much more at peace I felt and never went back to watching them again.
Like you, I devote that time to prayer and scripture reading and also select a book to read. This year I am reading:
Story of a Soul: The Autobiography of St. Therese of Lisieux
It was this review that persuaded me.
I was recommended "Story of a Soul" as the favorite book of a woman I much admired, who worked at a Carmelite monastery. Initially I wondered about the recommendation when I began the book. Therese of Lisieux lived a sheltered life. Her parents were financially secure and devoutly religious (they had to be encouraged by a priest to marry rather than to join a religious order, and later to consummate their marriage). Therese knew she wanted to be a nun from an extremely early age.
My first impression was to wonder why was this book recommended to me, when she has nothing in common with my life, at a time when I didn't known how I would pay the bills and was not sure what God wanted form me in terms of a vocation. True, her health was poor and she suffered the loss of her mother early in her life, so her life was not without sorrow. But she also seemed to have security, love, and an incredible sense of direction, which made me question what I could learn from her life, when these qualities were so missing in my own. Furthermore, I questioned whether some one who lived so holy a life, could be a realistic role model for me; as I have made some pretty unholy decisions in my past.
The book quickly grew on me and eradicated my concerns about it being an inaccessible guide for spirituality. The beauty of the writing is her approach to spirituality, which is accessible to any one in any walk of life. She describes souls as similar to different types of flowers. Some are roses, others lilies, and some like orchids, for example. And all can be equally pleasing to God in their own way, when seeking his role for them. People have different talents and different struggles, but these characteristics do not mean that any type is more valued than the other.
She writes that if the Christian Church is one body, than she wants to be the heart that loves, which I thought was a beautiful sentiment and a much needed philosophy in the world today. When I look on mistakes I've made in my own life, I realized that it is easiest to succumb to temptation when one feels alone and unloved, and I believe that people would make less such mistakes if they had the support of God's love through others. She writes frequently of the many ways that God is love. She believed that heaven for her would be to be able to help people on earth after she died. Many remarkable stories have been published in books about people who claim to have been helped when having asked Therese to pray for their needs. She is one of the most common saints that people claim to have seen an apparition of during their times of trouble.
She writes that any sacrifice in daily life can be offered to God, for the conversion of souls, or help of others, whether it is the suffering of an illness or loss, or the performance of a mundane daily chore. This is a practice also advocated by saints like Gertrude of Helfta, Catherine of Siena, Teresa of Avila, and Francis of Assisi, but it is a way of holy living that any one can practice, in any station of life, at any level of health. Therese also writes much about the prayer, and how her preferred method of praying rather than to memorize long formal prayers, is to speak directly to God as a child, or her struggles and requests.
The book is easy to read and intimate. One feels as if one is experiencing a conversation from Therese, while reading it. Excerpts beg to be read over and over again, and each reading makes me appreciate them more, and want to love others more. The only book that has made me fuller of love for God and others (outside of the Bible) is Catherine of Siena's "The Dialogues." Therese of Lisieux well earned her title as Doctor of the Church.
Thank you for sharing your Lenten plan. May our Lord bless and guide you both through the desert.
There’s evidence here everyday that you and a lot of your colleagues are very poor students of both Scripture and history.
Nothing wrong with your response.
There are certainly no examples of anyone fasting for a 40 day period in the Bible, after all.
I love St. Therese of Lisieux.
I am a born again Christian, as well as a Medieval Historian. My research area is Holy Women of the Later Middle Ages and their responses to death and disease. So I spend a lot of time reading Hagiographies, not just those of “my saints” but of others as well. I am very interested in the development of Hagiography as a genre. I think i have this book, i may have to dig it out (my library is 10k books and growing, lol).
The Latin term is Quadragesima (40th), which becomes Quaresima in Italian, Cuaresma in Spanish, and careme in French.
LiteKeeper:
While I understand from your evangelical perspective, you do not celebrate Lent, its practice is actually part of Apostolic Tradition. Again, while you may not embrace it, I hope after my post you will at least understand the Catholic, as well as Orthodox perspective on Lent [and also some of the Liturgical Reformed Protestant Traditions who have retained or rediscovered the practice]. Also, I would like to think my post below was done so in a non-polemical fashion.
Lent does mean spring coming from Old English, it is derived from the Latin Word quadragesima or forty days. Catholic Churches use a Liturgical calendar whereby the entire cycle of the year points to Christ. Hence, the Churchs new year begins in Advent, which is a season of preparation for both the birth of Christ (i.e. the Incarnation) and also a preparation for his second coming. Christmas follows advent and is a season of 12 days where the Church focuses on the birth of Christ and important feasts of the early life of Christ (Holy Family, Epiphany) and also added here is the Baptism of the Lord, which is the 3rd Sunday following Christmas day.
There is a period of Ordinary Time between Christmas and Lent, which begins on Ash Wednesday and leads up to the celebration of the paschal mystery (i.e. Easter Triduum, Holy Thursday, Good Friday, Pasch/Easter Sunday). So a Non-Catholic may ask questions such as What is Lent?, what is the purpose of Lent? and what is its historical origins. Again, the Catholic Church celebrates the entire Life of Christ in its Liturgy (Public Official worship of the Catholic Church). Lent is a 40-day Liturgical season of fasting, almsgiving and special prayer, which the Church sees in scripture in numerous places (e.g. Tobit 12:8, Mt 6:1-18). The purpose of Lent is to embrace and celebrate the public mysteries of Jesus Life (i.e. his Baptism, which was mentioned earlier) and now his temptations. The Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC 540) states:
Jesus’ temptation reveals the way in which the Son of God is Messiah, contrary to the way Satan proposes to him and the way men wish to attribute to him. This is why Christ vanquished the Tempter for us: “For we have not a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tested as we are, yet without sinning (c.f. Hebrews 4:15).” By the solemn forty days of Lent the Church unites herself each year to the mystery of Jesus in the desert.
The reason for 40 days in Lent is based on the Catholic Churchs principle of Typology, which is the key principle of Catholic Biblical Interpretation. Typology reads the Bible as a unified whole with Christ as the Center, thus Catholic discern in the Old Testament persons, events, signs, etc as prefigurements of Christ and events in the New Testament. From this perspective, King David prefigures Christ the eternal King of the new covenant, etc. In a similar fashion, in the OT we see 40 days as a biblical number relating to discipline, devotion, and preparation. For example, Moses stayed on the Mountain of God for forty days (c.f. Ex 24:18; 34:28); the scouts reconnoitered the land for 40 days (Numbers 13:25); Elijah traveled 40 days before he reached the cave where he has a an encounter with the Lord (1 Kings 19: 8-9); the city of Nineveh was given 40 days to repent (Jonah 3:4). As we move to the NT, and this is especially important for Catholics and fulfills the OT passages cited (i.e. the 40 days of preparation), we see Christ pray and fast for forty days before he begins his public ministry (c.f. Mt 4:2) and of course his public ministry will ultimately lead to the Cross.
We begin Lent with the marking of ashes, which in the Scriptures, is a biblical symbol of penance, which Lent is focused on. Along, with penance, we fast and give alms, as was alluded to earlier. Ashes, as a sign of repentance are evidenced in several OT passages (c.f. 1 Sam 4:12; 2 Sam 1:10) and also symbolize death and remind us of our mortality and Gods words expressed in the OT (c.f. Gen 3:19; Job 34:15; Psalm 90:3; 104:29). The Catholic Liturgy on Ash Wednesday echoes Gods words as the Priest says Remember man, that thou art dust and unto dust thou shall return. Catholic funeral Liturgies/Masses also echo this theme by saying Ashes to ashes, dust to dust.
As early as the 2nd century, we see evidence of some type of Lenten preparation for Easter. For example, St. Irenaeus (140-202 AD) wrote a letter to the Bishop of Rome (Pope St. Victor) [these are the so called Fragments, which have survived based on being cited in later works among the Fathers] regarding the dispute over the date to celebrate Easter. Also in this letter was a reference to how long the fast should be kept before Easter. Eusebius (263 to 340 AD) in his History of the Church, Vol. 24 quotes St. Irenaeus and writes: The dispute is not only about the day [i.e. Easter], but also about the actual character of the fast. Some think that they ought to fast one day, some for two, others still more; some make their day last 40 hours on end. Such variation of observance did not originate in our own day, but very much earlier, in the time of our forefathers.
Thus, the importance of this quote by Eusebius of St. Irenaeus illustrates that both Easter and some type of Lenten preparation where being celebrated in the 2nd century Church and has its roots back to the time of the Apostles. At the time of the Council of Nicea (325 AD), the method for calculating the date of Pascha/Easter was determined as well as the notion of a standard 40 day Lent preparation for Easter as Canon 5 of the Council of Nicea states two provincial synods should be held each year, one before the 40 days of Lent. The standard 40 day Lent becomes the universal practice of the orthodox Catholic Tradition in the later 4th and early 5th centuries as evidenced in the writings of St. Athanansius, St. Cyril of Jerusalem, St. Cyril of Alexandria and Pope Leo the Great.
In closing, the notion of a Lenten preparation for Easter goes back to the early Church and the Liturgical practice of it predates the final formation of the NT Biblical canon, which does not occur until the end of the 4th century. In addition, the practice itself is fully supported by the sacred scriptures and actually brings to life the scriptures in the Liturgy of the Church. So, from the Catholic perspective, and I think the Orthodox Church would agree, Lent is a fully Apostolic Tradition supported by both Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition and affirmed by the Council of Nicea in 325 AD.
Blessed Ash Wednesday to you.
Are you familiar with this one?
I am familiar with the name, but that is all. Thanks for the link, I’ll check her out.
Some of us evangelical Christians are not celebrating Lent, believing that it is not biblical. In fact, there is evidence that Lent is derived from the Mystery Religions of Babylon.What, exactly, is not "biblical" about fasting? Or penance? Or almsgiving? What "evidence" do you assert supports your implicit claim that celebrating Lent is a Babylonian Pagan celebration?
40 Ways to Improve Your Lent
Everything Lent (Lots of links)
The Best Kind of Fasting
Getting Serious About Lent
Lent Overview
Meditations on the Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ [Devotional]
On Lent... and Lourdes (Benedict XVI's Angelus address)
Lent for Newbies
Lent -- 2008 -- Come and Pray Each Day
Lent: Why the Christian Must Deny Himself
Lenten Workshop [lots of ideas for all]
Lent and Reality
Forty Days (of Lent) [Devotional/Reflections]
Pope Benedict takes his own advice, plans to go on retreat for Lent
GUIDE FOR LENT - What the Catholic Church Says
Message of His Holiness Benedict XVI for Lent 2008
40 Days for Life: 2008 Campaigns [Lent Registration this week]
Vatican Web Site Focuses on Lent
Almsgiving [Lent]
Conversion Through Prayer, Fasting and Almsgiving [Lent]
Feasting on Purple [Lent]
Lent: A Time for Prayer, Reflection and Giving
Denver Archbishops Lenten Message: Restore us as a culture of Life
Where does Ash Wednesday get its ashes?
Catholic Caucus: Daily Rosary Prayer for Lent
On the 40 Days of Lent General Audience of Pope Benedict XVI
Lenten Stations -- Stational Churches - visit each with us during Lent {Catholic Caucus}
Something New for Lent: Part I -- Holy Souls Saturdays
Reflections for Lent (February, March and April, 2007)
Lent 2007: The Love Letter Written by Pope Benedict
Pre-Lent through Easter Prayer and Reflections -- 2007
Stations of the Cross [Catholic/Orthodox Caucus]
For study and reflection during Lent - Mind, Heart, Soul [Catholic/Orthodox Caucus]
Ash Wednesday and the Lenten Fast-Family observance Lenten season [Catholic/Orthodox Caucus]
Pre-Lenten Days -- Family activities-Shrove Tuesday (Mardi Gras)[Catholic/Orthodox Caucus]
40 Ways to Get the Most Out of Lent! [Catholic/Orthodox Caucus]
Lenten Fasting or Feasting? [Catholic Caucus]
Pope's Message for Lent-2007
THE TRUE NATURE OF FASTING (Catholic/Orthodox Caucus)
The Triduum and 40 Days
The Three Practices of Lent: Praying, Fasting. Almsgiving
Why We Need Lent
MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI FOR LENT 2006
Lent a Time for Renewal, Says Benedict XVI
Why You Should Celebrate Lent
Getting the Most Out of Lent
Lent: A Time to Fast From Media and Criticism Says President of Pontifical Liturgical Institute
Give it up (making a Lenten sacrifice)
The History of Lent
The Holy Season of Lent -- Fast and Abstinence
The Holy Season of Lent -- The Stations of the Cross
Lent and Fasting
Mardi Gras' Catholic Roots [Shrove Tuesday]
Kids and Holiness: Making Lent Meaningful to Children
Ash Wednesday
All About Lent
‘(And, by golly, that picture above looks like a Methodist minister wearing a deacon’s stole, doesn’t it? )’
He can wear a priest wanna-be outfit for Ash Wednesday, that’s all right, but I bet his congregation was deprived of the rather chilling yer ethereal sensation created by our priest saying the words, “Remember man, that thou art dust, and unto dust thou shalt return”...in LATIN!
Both Masses packed solid, even though not a holy day of obligation. Something appeals to Protestants and Catholics alike about Lent: a God-given chance to start over, and a formal, structured season with weekly special events and readings that makes it very easy to do so.
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