Lent 2017
The picture above captures the moment of repose after we
celebrated the Lord’s Passion on Good Friday one year. Mother Abbess had the inspiration to position
the cross we had venerated as is shown.
The relic of the True Cross is displayed with two red vigil lights, and
the sanctuary is bereft of every other adornment.
Here we are at the beginning of this Lenten season. But even now, our faces are set towards
Jerusalem and a certain hill outside the city where the drama of Christ’s
redemptive love will reach its culmination.
Those of us who are privileged to live by the liturgy and especially to
sing the Church’s Gregorian Chant, are always energized with a new
vitality. Lent is not only about
lamenting our sins and mourning the pain of our loving Savior. It is that, to be sure. But if this rather negative orientation is
not to become moribund, it must be balanced with the confident assuredness of
God’s tender mercy. The Letter to the
Hebrews tells us that we should approach the throne of mercy with boldness. On Ash Wednesday, we chanted: “You have mercy on all, O Lord, and nothing
do you hate of the things that you have made, dissimulating the sins of men for
the sake of penance and sparing them, for you are the Lord our God” [my own
translation of the Latin text]. These
are not words of a slave trembling with fear before a harsh taskmaster. Rather, these are declarations of a well
beloved child before his Father. They
are audacious, considering that he is talking to God, after all! He even says that God dissimulates when He is forced to regard our sins, because of our
repentance. The child has indeed been
naughty, but he is sorry and he knows the Father will forgive him for love’s
sake.
At the start of today’s Mass of the First Sunday of Lent, we
have the Father speak: “He will invoke
me and I will listen to him. I will
rescue him and glorify him. With length
of days I will fulfill him”. Jesus is
the first object of the Father’s regard, and through Him we are included. The price of our salvation was Jesus’
sacrifice on the Cross. He, the well
Beloved Son, was willing to suffer the seeming abandonment of the Father so
that we could return to Him whom we
had abandoned. Our first parents sinned,
breaking their love relationship with God; and we the children of Adam and Eve
have followed in their footsteps. But
Jesus has come after us, taking our nakedness and death upon Himself, crying
out with our voice and our dereliction.
The Father has listened. He
rescued Jesus from death by glorifying Him and raising Him from the dead. If we are joined with Jesus in His death by
faith, then we will rise with Him in His life.
We are children of God! Length of
days, even to eternity, is our destiny, if we but suffer a little while. This is Lent.
Let us begin!
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