LENTEN CUSTOMS
Baptism Is the Key
The key to understanding the meaning of Lent is simple:
Baptism. Preparation for Baptism and for renewing baptismal commitment lies at
the heart of the season. Since the Second Vatican Council, the Church has
reemphasized the baptismal character of Lent, especially through the
restoration of the Catechumenate and its Lenten rituals. Our challenge today is
to renew our understanding of this important season of the Church year and to
see how we can integrate our personal practices into this renewed perspective.
Why is Baptism so important in our Lenten understanding?
Lent as a 40-day season developed in the fourth century from three merging
sources. The first was the ancient paschal fast that began as a two-day
observance before Easter but was gradually lengthened to 40 days. The second
was the catechumenate as a process of preparation for Baptism, including an
intense period of preparation for the Sacraments of Initiation to be celebrated
at Easter. The third was the Order of Penitents, which was modeled on the
catechumenate and sought a second conversion for those who had fallen back into
serious sin after Baptism. As the catechumens (candidates for Baptism) entered
their final period of preparation for Baptism, the penitents and the rest of
the community accompanied them on their journey and prepared to renew their
baptismal vows at Easter.
Lent, then, is radically baptismal. In this Update we'll consider some of the familiar
customs of Lent and show how we can renew some of our Lenten customs to bring
forth the baptismal theme.
Ashes
Ash Wednesday liturgies are some of the best attended in the
entire year. Some people suggest that is just because the Church is giving out
something free, but I suspect there are deeper reasons! Ashes are an ancient
symbol of repentance (sackcloth and ashes). They also remind us of our
mortality ("remember that you are dust") and thus of the day when we
will stand before God and be judged. This can be linked easily to the death and
resurrection motif of Baptism. To prepare well for the day we die, we must die
now to sin and rise to new life in Christ. Being marked with ashes at the
beginning of Lent indicates our recognition of the need for deeper conversion
of our lives during this season of renewal.
For most older Catholics, the first thought that Lent brings
to mind is giving something up. In my childhood, the standard was to give up
candy, a discipline that found suitable reward in the baskets of sugary treats
we received on Easter. Some of us even added to the Easter surplus by saving
candy all through Lent, stockpiling what we would have eaten had we not
promised to give it up.
Some years ago a friend of mine told me that he had urged
his children to move beyond giving up candy to giving up some habit of sin that
marked their lives. About halfway through Lent he asked the children how they
were doing with their Lenten promise. One of his young sons had promised to
give up fighting with his brothers and sisters during Lent. When his father
asked him how it was going, the boy replied, "I'm doing pretty good,
Dad—but boy, I can't wait until Easter!"
That response indicates that this boy had only partly
understood the purpose of Lenten "giving up." Lent is about
conversion, turning our lives more completely over to Christ and his way of
life. That always involves giving up sin in some form. The goal is not just to
abstain from sin for the duration of Lent but to root sin out of our lives
forever. Conversion means leaving behind an old way of living and acting in
order to embrace new life in Christ. For catechumens, Lent is a period intended
to bring their initial conversion to completion.
The primary way that the Church assists the catechumens
(called the elect after the celebration of the Rite of Election on the First
Sunday of Lent) in this conversion process during Lent is through the
celebration of the rites called Scrutinies. These ritual celebrations on the
Third, Fourth and Fifth Sundays of Lent are communal prayers celebrated around
the elect to strengthen them to overcome the power of sin in their lives and to
grow in virtue. To scrutinize something means to examine it closely. The
community does not scrutinize the catechumens; the catechumens scrutinize their
own lives and allow God to scrutinize them and to heal them.
There is a danger in celebrating the Scrutinies if the
community thinks of the elect as the only sinners in our midst who need
conversion. All of us are called to continuing conversion throughout our lives,
so we join with the elect in scrutinizing our own lives and praying to God for
the grace to overcome the power of sin that still infects our hearts.
Many parishes today seek to surface the concrete issues that
the elect need to confront; these issues then become the focus of the
intercessions during the Scrutinies. Some parishes extend this discernment
process to the wider community so that all are called to name the ways that
evil continues to prevent them from living the gospel fully. Even if the parish
does not do this in an organized way, every Catholic should spend some time
reflecting on what obstacles to gospel living exist in his or her own life.
Then when the Scrutinies are celebrated, we will all know that the prayers are
for us as well as for the elect.
Taking seriously this dynamic of scrutiny and conversion
gives us a richer perspective on Lenten "giving up." What we are to
give up more than anything else is sin, which is to say we are to give up
whatever keeps us from living out our baptismal promises fully. Along with the
elect we all need to approach the season of Lent asking ourselves what needs to
change in our lives if we are to live the gospel values that Jesus taught us.
Our journey through these forty days should be a movement ever closer to Christ
and to the way of life he has exemplified for us.
The elect deal with sin through the Scrutinies and through
the waters of the font; the already baptized deal with sin through the
Sacrament of Penance. The same kind of reflection that enables all members of
the community to share in the Scrutinies can lead the baptized to celebrate
this Sacrament of Reconciliation to renew their baptismal commitment.
Lent is the primary time for celebrating the Sacrament of
Penance, because Lent is the season for baptismal preparation and baptismal
renewal. Early Christian teachers called this sacrament "second
Baptism," because it is intended to enable us to start again to live the
baptismal life in its fullness. Those who experience the loving mercy of God in
the Sacrament of Reconciliation should find themselves standing alongside the
newly baptized at Easter filled with great joy at the new life God has given
all of us.
The three traditional pillars of Lenten observance are
prayer, fasting and almsgiving. The key to renewed appropriation of these
practices is to see their link to baptismal renewal.
Prayer: More time given to prayer during Lent should draw us closer
to the Lord. We might pray especially for the grace to live out our baptismal
promises more fully. We might pray for the elect who will be baptized at Easter
and support their conversion journey by our prayer. We might pray for all those
who will celebrate the sacrament of reconciliation with us during Lent that
they will be truly renewed in their baptismal commitment.
Fasting: Fasting is one of the most ancient practices linked to Lent. In
fact, the paschal fast predates Lent as we know it. The early Church fasted
intensely for two days before the celebration of the Easter Vigil. This fast
was later extended and became a 40-day period of fasting leading up to Easter.
Vatican II called us to renew the observance of the ancient paschal fast: "...let
the paschal fast be kept sacred. Let it be celebrated everywhere on Good Friday
and, where possible, prolonged throughout Holy Saturday, so that the joys of
the Sunday of the Resurrection may be attained with uplifted and clear
mind" (Liturgy, # 110).
Fasting is more than a means of developing self-control. It
is often an aid to prayer, as the pangs of hunger remind us of our hunger for
God. The first reading on the Friday after Ash Wednesday points out another
important dimension of fasting. The prophet Isaiah insists that fasting without
changing our behavior is not pleasing to God. "This, rather, is the
fasting that I wish: releasing those bound unjustly, untying the thongs of the
yoke; setting free the oppressed, breaking every yoke; sharing your bread with
the hungry, sheltering the oppressed and the homeless; clothing the naked when
you see them, and not turning your back on your own" (Is 58:6-7).
Fasting should be linked to our concern for those who are
forced to fast by their poverty, those who suffer from the injustices of our
economic and political structures, those who are in need for any reason. Thus
fasting, too, is linked to living out our baptismal promises. By our Baptism,
we are charged with the responsibility of showing Christ's love to the world,
especially to those in need. Fasting can help us realize the suffering that so
many people in our world experience every day, and it should lead us to greater
efforts to alleviate that suffering.
Abstaining from meat traditionally also linked us to the
poor, who could seldom afford meat for their meals. It can do the same today if
we remember the purpose of abstinence and embrace it as a spiritual link to
those whose diets are sparse and simple. That should be the goal we set for
ourselves—a sparse and simple meal. Avoiding meat while eating lobster misses
the whole point!
Almsgiving: It should be obvious at this point that almsgiving, the third
traditional pillar, is linked to our baptismal commitment in the same way. It
is a sign of our care for those in need and an expression of our gratitude for
all that God has given to us. Works of charity and the promotion of justice are
integral elements of the Christian way of life we began when we were baptized.
While this devotion certainly has a place in Lent, the
overemphasis given to it in the past tended to distort the meaning of the
season. Because the stations were prayed publicly throughout the whole season,
the impression was given that Lent was primarily about commemorating the
passion and death of Christ.
Vatican II strongly endorsed the use of devotions as part of
Catholic spirituality, but it also called for their renewal, to harmonize them
with the sacred liturgy (see Liturgy #13). The liturgy of Lent focuses on
the passion and death of the Lord only near the end of the season, especially
with the proclamation of the Passion on Palm (Passion) Sunday and again on Good
Friday. The weekday readings between the Fifth Sunday of Lent and Palm Sunday
also point toward the coming Passion, so that might also be an appropriate time
to pray the Stations. The earlier weeks of Lent, however, focus much more on
Baptism and covenant than on the Passion.
When we do pray the Stations of the Cross, we can also
connect them with the baptismal character of Lent if we place the stations
themselves in the context of the whole paschal mystery. In Baptism we are
plunged into the mystery of Christ's death and resurrection, and our baptismal
commitment includes a willingness to give our life for others as Jesus did.
Recalling his passion and death can remind us that we, too, may be called to
suffer in order to be faithful to the call of God.
One limitation with the traditional form of the Stations is
the absence of the second half of the paschal mystery. The liturgy never
focuses on the death of Christ without recalling his resurrection. Some forms
of the Stations of the Cross include a 15th station to recall the resurrection
as an integral part of the paschal mystery.
Some contemporary forms of the Stations also make clear the
link between the sufferings of Christ in the first century and the sufferings
of Christ's body in the world today. Such an approach can help us to recognize
and admit the ways that we have failed to live up to our baptismal mission to
spread the gospel and manifest the love of Christ to those in need.
As we near the end of Lent, we celebrate Passion (Palm)
Sunday. At the beginning of the liturgy, we receive palms in memory of Christ's
triumphal entry into Jerusalem .
As a symbol of triumph, the palms point us toward Christ's resurrection and
might remind us of the saints in heaven "wearing white robes and holding
palm branches in their hands" (Rev 7:9). The white robes remind us of
baptismal garments, and the palms suggest their triumph over sin and death
through the waters of Baptism.
(www.americancatholic.org)
ASH WEDNESDAY
ASH WEDNESDAY
Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of the Season of Lent. It is a season of penance, reflection, and fasting which prepares us for Christ's Resurrection on Easter Sunday, through which we attain redemption.
Why we receive the ashes
Following the example of the Nine vites, who did penance in sackcloth and ashes, our foreheads are marked with ashes to humble our hearts and reminds us that life passes away on Earth. We remember this when we are told
"Remember, Man is dust, and unto dust you shall return."
Ashes are a symbol of penance made sacramental by the blessing of the Church, and they help us develop a spirit of humility and sacrifice.
The distribution of ashes comes from a ceremony of ages past. Christians who had committed grave faults performed public penance. On Ash Wednesday, the Bishop blessed the hair shirts which they were to wear during the forty days of penance, and sprinkled over them ashes made from the palms from the previous year. Then, while the faithful recited the Seven Penitential Psalms, the penitents were turned out of the church because of their sins -- just as Adam, the first man, was turned out of Paradise because of his disobedience. The penitents did not enter the church again until Maundy Thursday after having won reconciliation by the toil of forty days' penance and sacramental absolution. Later, all Christians, whether public or secret penitents, came to receive ashes out of devotion. In earlier times, the distribution of ashes was followed by a penitential procession.
The Ashes
The ashes are made from the blessed palms used in the Palm Sunday celebration of the previous year. The ashes are christened with Holy Water and are scented by exposure to incense. While the ashes symbolize penance and contrition, they are also a reminder that God is gracious and merciful to those who call on Him with repentant hearts. His Divine mercy is of utmost importance during the season of Lent, and the Church calls on us to seek that mercy during the entire Lenten season with reflection, prayer and penance.
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