A Daily Lent Reader: Daily readers, #1
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This book is written as a series of daily reflections for the season in the Christian calendar that is referred to as Lent. Lent is a time that commemorates the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist; the subsequent retreat of Jesus to the desert to face his three temptations by the devil; and then Jesus' return to Jerusalem, his death on the Cross (Good Friday) and his Resurrection on Easter Sunday. But what does it really mean to say that Christ is risen, and that he has died no more, nearly two millennium after the fact? How can one follow the teachings of a man who lived in a radically different society, so long ago, in a way that is relevant and meaningful today? The answer is to connect with those events as if they were happening today. That is the real potential power of the liturgical calender. In a superficial sense the calendar commemorates past happenings but it can be used as a daily practice. Living in the day is a way of eliminating time and history. After all, clocks and calendars are social conventions, useful but not fundamental aspects of the nature of reality. God's creation is eternal and past, present and future collapse into this present moment, always. Practicing Lent in one's daily life puts this on a human scale where the truth and reality of eternity can penetrate into daily consciousness. This daily reader is a tool to help with such a practice.
Cameron Gordon
I am creative fiction and nonfiction writer of plays, poetry and prose. My themes are eclectic but the major ones include: the meaning and practice of daily spirituality; the human experience and how it is affected by an increasingly technocratic and technologized world; war and peace in the digital age; quirky narratives of quirky trips; and unusual bits of history. I have training in a technical field and have had careers in government and academia. I continue to practice as an independent scholar but have devoted the greater part of my time and energy to being an artist.
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A Daily Lent Reader - Cameron Gordon
A BEGINNING
This book is written as a series of daily reflections for the season in the Christian calendar that is referred to as Lent. Lent is a time that commemorates the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist; the subsequent retreat of Jesus to the desert to face his three temptations by the Devil; and then Jesus' return to Jerusalem, his death on the Cross (Good Friday) and his Resurrection on Easter Sunday.
This sequence of events is said to have taken place over forty days but the Lent season we mark today runs for forty six actual calendar days. For western rite Christian churches of the Catholics and Protestants, Lent begins on Ash Wednesday. For eastern rite Orthodox
churches the season begins two days earlier on what they call Clean Monday. This reader starts with Ash Wednesday, following the western practice.
One can approach Lent mechanically or superficially. The practice of giving up some desired thing, such as chocolate, is a common way of practicing Lent, though many have trouble following such a discipline for the entire season. Attendance at church services, and taking part in Lent rituals, such as getting one's head smeared with ash on Ash Wednesday, are other means of marking the season.
While helpful, doing just these things alone is not a full living out of the Lent spirit. The purpose of the liturgical calendar is to make present and real the events of Christ's life today, so that the lessons of the Gospels and the experiences of Jesus can be engaged with as immediately as they were by the people around when Christ walked among us. Lent ends with Easter and the cry of Christ is risen
and this, in a real sense, is an attempt to move everyone in this modern world as if the living Jesus were still here.
But what does it really mean to say that Christ is risen, and that he has died no more, nearly two millennium after the fact? How can one follow the teachings of a man who lived in a radically different society, so long ago, in a way that is relevant and meaningful today? One answer is to connect with those events as if they were happening today. That is the real potential power of the liturgical calendar.
In a superficial sense this calendar commemorates past happenings but it can also be used as a core of a daily practice. After all, clocks and calendars are social conventions, useful but not fundamental aspects of the nature of reality. God's creation is eternal and past, present and future collapse into this present moment, always. Practicing Lent in one's daily life puts this on a human scale where the truth and reality of eternity can penetrate into daily consciousness. This daily reader is a tool to help with such a practice.
As for me, the author, I am nobody special, not a biblical scholar nor holy man nor especially gifted. I have had a few experiences that could be deemed ‘peak’ or ‘religious’ but I don’t consider myself as 'enlightened' or 'saved'. In my own journey as a Christian I have come to a place where I felt the best way that I could relate to Jesus was to relate to him as a man and contemplate the life that he actually led while he was here on earth. If I just stick to the man’s life, as much as I can understand it, I find that sometimes I can better understand the twists and turns of my own life. This practice has led me to some deep personal explorations of the liturgical calendar and the writing of this little book in particular. I hope that this slim volume has things to say to others in their explorations of Lent as well.
An editorial note: whenever I use biblical quotations, I have kept them short and I am using the New International Version (NIV) translation, under fair-use copyright provisions.
(1) ASH WEDNESDAY
The Lent story begins with Jesus being baptized by John the Baptist and experiencing a wild and unsettling experience of the heavens opening and speaking to him. Jesus immediately flees to the desert, following this leading from above. Here is the account in Matthew (3:13-17)
Then Jesus came from Galilee to the Jordan to be baptized by John. But John tried to deter him, saying,
I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me? Jesus replied,
Let it be so now; it is proper for us to do this to fulfil all righteousness. Then John consented. As soon as Jesus was baptized, he went up out of the water. At that moment heaven was opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him. And a voice from heaven said,
This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased."
This is a dramatic experience that few of us are likely to experience. We know that Jesus was not your ordinary human being. But he was still human and that meant that he was born, he was living, and he would eventually die, just like everyone else.
It is interesting that Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent. In some churches people go to a special service on that day and receive ashes on their forehead to signify that we came from dust and to dust we shall return. Celebrants then walk around with an ashen cross on their forehead, not washing if off until the following morning.
Why does Lent begin with such solemnity, one might even say morbidity? One possible interpretation is that ash signifies a fundamental choice about life. We know that death is inevitable. We don't have forever. What do we do with the life we've been given?
Jesus was facing this very question after his baptism. He was told to go to the desert and wait there, that he had a mission of some sort, but it was not clear what it was. He had to go off by himself for a while, to face himself and his current situation, with the help of God alone.
It must be remembered that Jesus could potentially 'fail' in his appointed mission. We read the story now and assume that a positive outcome is a foregone conclusion. But for Jesus, in that day, this obviously was not so. Instead Jesus was faced with circumstances and leadings, like his call from above after his baptism, which forced decisions on him. Human life seems to be made up of similar junctures and those of Jesus differed only by being more dramatic and super-natural than what we normally face.
Just like us, Jesus needed support from others: in this case John the Baptist who baptized him even though John felt he was not fit to do so. Jesus also needed to interpret messages he received from the situations he faced, and these messages were not always clear. And he needed to act. In all cases he had to pray and seek guidance from God.
Life can be an elaborate wait for physical death. Or it can be a process of living, with death made fundamentally irrelevant because one is in