Abp Pizzaballa: Jesus
accompanies us to the Easter garden
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| Ash Wednesday, making the start of Lent (ANSA) |
Archbishop Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the Apostolic
Administrator of Jerusalem, in the Holy Land, sends a message of Lent to his
“friends in Christ”.
By Francesca Merlo
Archbishop Pizzaballa begins his 2019 Lenten message by
asking all faithful to “return to the awareness that breathes life into the
liturgy and the faith of Christians at this time”.
Christ's experience
He explains that the expression “quadragesimale sacramentum”
(The Lenten Sacrament), which is so often heard during this penitential season,
is “neither our work nor invention”. Instead, he says, these days “it will be
Christ himself who enters our deserts, experiences our temptations and joins us
in His victory”. Because, he says, in these moments of hardship – both for our
Church and for our world, there is a strong need for us to turn to the Lord.
Archbishop Pizzaballa goes on to explain his use of the word
“desert”. He compares the path of Lent to an arid desert, which Jesus
accompanies us through, always standing beside us “in the power of faith and in
the obedience of Spirit” all the way to the Easter garden. There, says
Archbishop Pizzaballa, we reach His tomb “and ours, finally emptied of all
anguish and pain of death.”
This metaphor of the desert shows the “gift” that is one’s
commitment to Lent. In this 40-day long commitment, Archbishop Pizzaballa
explains that we face the “aridity” of our lives, “without yielding to the
shortcuts of miracle, compromise, mistrust or, worse, sin”.
Easter exodus
“It is written”, he continues, that God is faithful to us,
and that through our dedication - as Jesus was dedicated – there is an “Easter
exodus from death to life, from slavery to freedom, from mistrust to hope” that
exists for all those who, like Christ in the desert, “trusts and entrusts
himself to the Word of God”.
The Lenten sacrament is an opportunity to “fast” from
selfishness, individualism and mistrust, says Archbishop Pizzaballa. Through
helping the poor and the needy, and making ourselves available to the gift of
sharing, we “can make flourish the fruitfulness of Easter”, which, he concludes
“is Life that is born from the offering of oneself”.

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