Monday, March 10, 2014

2014 Lenten Message: Don't "Give Up," Do More


Great Lent Is a Time of Doing More, Not of Having Less

Many people seem to think of Great Lent as a time of denial and deprivation, a time of struggle and suffering.  In fact, Great Lent offers us the opportunity to gain and grow, to renew and rejoice.  It is true that in this time we emphasize prayer, fasting, and works of charity.  But these are things that are normal parts of Christian life all year ‘round.  Great Lent provides us with the incentive to do more, to seek the “life in abundance” that Jesus came to bring us.  Great Lent isn’t about having less—less leisure time, less food, less money.  It is about doing more—devoting more time in prayer to our relationship with God; becoming more conscious, through fasting, of food as God’s generous gift to us; doing more good works to help our sisters and brothers.

Prayer in Great Lent typically focuses on the church services of the Akathist Hymn, Great Compline, and Presanctified Eucharist.  It also points us to the Prayer of St Ephrem, which warns us of the dangers of laziness, greed, pride, and gossip, and reminds us of the virtues of humility, patience, love, and self-control.  We can also devote more time to prayer by reading the Holy Bible, especially the Old Testament books of Genesis, Isaiah, and Proverbs.  How powerful it would be for all parishioners and friends of St Joseph Church to take extra time each day to pray for our parish—that it may grow in faith and spiritual insight, that it may grow in numbers, that it may grow in charity and generosity, and that it may grow always in giving glory to God.

Fasting has always been part of human religious experience, in practically every culture.  Fasting accomplishes many things:  it makes us aware of our dependence on food, which comes from God, and so makes us thankful.  It makes us aware of the strength God gives us to endure hardships.  It makes us realize that we don’t really need to eat and drink so much, or so richly, and so helps us find humility and generosity.  It sharpens our senses and weakens our resistance, bringing us closer to God and making us more open to God.  It helps us to understand the suffering of the poor and makes us more willing to help them.  Fasting also helps us to connect with the sufferings of Jesus Christ and to have a better appreciation of His sacrifices for our salvation.  The Holy Tradition of our Church gives us guidelines to help us experience all these effects and benefits of fasting.

The Traditional Fast is quite strict.  The use of olive oil and wine (or other alcoholic drinks) is not permitted, nor the flesh of any animal with a backbone (including fish, except on the feast of the Annunciation and on Palm Sunday), nor animal products (milk, cheese, butter, eggs, lard, etc.).  On weekdays, only one meal, in the evening after Vespers.  On Saturdays and Sundays, two meals, at mid-day and in the evening, with olive oil and wine permitted, which are also allowed on 24 February (the 1st and 2nd Finding of the Head of John the Baptist), on 9 March (the 40 Holy Martyrs of Sebastea), on 24 March (Forefeast of the Annunciation), on 26 March (Synaxis of the Archangel Gabriel), and on Holy Thursday.  Fasting is more intense in the first week of Great Lent and in Holy Week.  The traditional fast is now seldom observed with complete strictness. 

In Current Fasting Practice, many Byzantine Catholic and Orthodox Christians keep the first week of Lent and Holy Week as times of stricter fast, but modify the fast during the remainder of Great Lent.  Typically, those keeping a strict fast would not eat before noon on any day, and would not eat a second meal until after receiving the Eucharist at the Presanctified Liturgy on Wednesday or Friday evening.  A strict fast might permit fish, but would still exclude meat, animal products, olive oil, and alcohol.

The Absolute Minimum Fast, according to the Pastoral Handbook of the Diocese of Newton, means not eating before noon on the first day of Great Lent and on Great Thursday, Great Friday, and Great and Holy Saturday, and not eating meat on those days or the Fridays of Great Lent (just as we do not eat meat on other Fridays).

Fasting is a physical and spiritual discipline.  It is not meant to cause suffering or physical harm.  However, it is meant to require effort and to impose some hardship, not because the body or the material world is bad and must be despised, and not because by our effort we can win God’s favor, but because hardship helps us to focus on the Source of all good, and because God asks our cooperation with His will.

Fasting is not an end in itself, nor a legal obligation.  As Bishop Kallistos Ware writes, “Divorced from prayer and from the reception of the holy sacraments, unaccompanied by acts of compassion, our fasting becomes pharisaical or even demonic.  It leads, not to contrition and joyfulness, but to pride, inward tension, and irritability.”

No one should feel guilty or discouraged if he or she cannot follow the fast because of health or other weakness.  Likewise, no one should take pride is observing the fast, but rather should give thanks and glory to God, who makes it possible.  But no one can simply dismiss the fast as not applicable, or as inconvenient, or as meaningless.  Follow the fast as strictly as you can, with equal attention to prayer and almsgiving.  Ask your pastor for guidance if you need to modify the fast.  Don’t just make up your own rules, because it is important for the whole community to share in the effort to come closer to God.

Good Works are the fruit of faith.  Our belief in God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—causes us to put our faith into action, to fulfill the commandments of Jesus to love God completely and to love our neighbors just as we love ourselves.  During Great Lent, we are challenged to do more good works, to increase our efforts to share God’s love and generosity.  We can do this with our time and talent, such as helping in a food bank or community service center, helping build houses with Habitat for Humanity, walking in support of a good cause such as breast cancer, hunger, AIDS, or opposition to the death penalty, and so on.  We can do this with our money, giving more to our parish, to our favorite charities, to individuals who ask us for help, to The Shepherd’s Care program of our Melkite Church, and so on.

Everything we do in Great Lent should be done not because of compulsion or fear of breaking the rules, but because we love God and seek to glorify and thank God for all the gifts we have received—life, health, family, food, prosperity, education, freedom, faith, and above all, salvation to eternal life.

So, Happy Lent to everyone!  Because Lent is about more, not less.