WITH Ash
Wednesday, we enter a new season of Lent. In
spite of the gloom and austerity usually associated with
it, there’s
actually something new and bright to it. That’s because
Lent involves
a certain dying to ourselves so we can be born again in
Christ.
That’s the
plain truth about Lent. All the sacrifices,
mortifications and penance, the fasting and abstinence,
are meant to
cure us of our old man so we can be a new man in Christ.
(cfr Eph
4,22-24)
Let’s not
forget that Christ’s redemptive sacrifice would
not be complete without his resurrection. The whole
Lenten season,
with its epicenter on Good Friday, would be meaningless
without Easter
Sunday. Lent cannot be but end in the joy of Easter. It
has to show
the passage from defeat to triumph, from death to life
everlasting.
Lent should put
our full attention to the necessity of the
Christ’s Cross in our life. It is what re-creates us. It
perfects the
precarious condition of our first creation, when we only
knew how to
enjoy the good but would not know what to do when we get
into the ways
of evil.
The Cross
brings us to Christ. “If any man will come after
me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and
follow me.” (Mt
16,24) This is actually a formula we should always
engrave in our
hearts.
The Cross
teaches us the true and complete ways of love.
We often have our own ideas of love that are usually
sweet and sugary,
but actually incomplete, even twisted and detached from
its true
source and pattern.
The Cross
extends the dimensions of our life, going beyond
our natural limits so it can merge with God’s own life.
We are meant
for this. We have been designed for this.
Lent reminds us
that we need to weep and mourn somehow. We
tend to get so absorbed with our earthly affairs and
concerns, dancing
to their twists and turns, that we forget we need to be
with God. We
have to acknowledge our need for purification and
conversion.
That is why in
the first reading of the Mass for Ash
Wednesday, which marks the beginning of Lent, we are
told, “Even now,
says the Lord, return to me with your whole heart, with
fasting, and
weeping, and mourning…” (Joel 2,12)
Yes, we have to
remember this invitation of God to us. We
have to go back to him with our whole heart that would
first need to
be purified through fasting, weeping and mourning. And
the second
reading, from the Second Letter of St. Paul to the
Corinthians, tells
us “now is the acceptable time, now is the day of
salvation.” (6,2)
This liturgical
season of Lent highlights a basic need,
that of conversion, from the inmost part of our being,
our heart and
mind, to the most social and global dimension of our
life.
This is the be-all
and end-all of Lent, supposed to be a
permanent feature in our consciousness, not to serve as a
wet blanket,
but rather as a stimulus for us to return to the orbit
proper to us.
It’s like a corrective maintenance for us.
We have to be
wary of the many factors, especially in our
current culture and world environment, that tend to
weaken our
awareness of this need, and even to distort and annul it.
We have been
warned so many times before by saints and
Church leaders that our sense of sin down the ages has
been quite
skewed and left out of sync with our faith in God’s plan
for us.
away from our God, our Creator and Father. Yes, it’s time
to remind
ourselves that we come from God, not just from dust, and
that we are
meant to live our life with him and to return to him.
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