Lent 2012
February 21, 2012
Lent approaches with a different urgency this year. My life, in many ways, continues to improve. Yet, more now than ever, my life is a whirling tempest.
My wife and I have dealt with the impact that serious illness can have on a family. Thankfully, that illness has not been borne by either my wife, my children or by me. This, however, proves to be some of the difficulty. Is it worse to be the person suffering or the person going through the suffering with you? Suffice to say, when someone is seriously ill in a family, everyone suffers. The pain of finding a “new normal” is experienced by all; still, I imagine it must alienate the afflicted more than those that love the afflicted. This pains me, because I understand the sense of alienation that my wife and I have felt through it all and cannot wrap my mind around how to deal with it being worse. As I articulate those feelings, there is a certain sense of shame that arises – how selfish I must be to wallow in my own feelings while another suffers. But, I think that is the point, when we all participate in the suffering, we all feel the pain, and it would be wrong of me not to weed out the roots of selfishness and bitterness by examining closely how I feel.
My discernment for vocation and calling in the Church continues; and, while peace abounds in the process, the decisions God calls me to make put me at odds with very many important people in my life. There is no doubt that my spiritual life has been transformed. As my perspective grows, though, the tensions I have with certain ideologies and practices grow as well. I perceive that some of these tensions will bloom into outright contentions. Contentions that will cost me relationships and alliances. In short, faithfulness to Christ and his Church are going to drive some wedges in my life. While that is a situation that is prescribed by Christ in the Gospels, it is no less painful. I can see how some, after hearing the call, “Come, follow me” turned in sorrow. We tend to shake our heads in disappointment at these characters, but I think they knew as well as any what was at stake. How do we deal with loyalty and with faithfulness? Apparently, being loyal is to be commended, but being loyal to the wrong thing or person is folly.
Consequently, this season of repentance takes on a starkly corporate reality for me, meaning I feel more prominently my role in the corporate body. In the past, Lent has had a personal tone. In the past, I have been turned inward for the sake of purging a personal indulgence that prevented me from being faithful to my vows. This year, I feel the Holy Spirit driving me to purge weakness of heart. Some of us need to examine the ways in which we are happy to compromise the Gospel for the sake of ease. It is a simple thing to believe we have the “right answer” and then to sever ties with people that disagree. It is a much different thing continually and faithfully to engage people that disagree with us in love. We have grown weary in accountability, well – at least, I have. Lord, give me the strength to do the hard work of the Gospel. Give me the strength in affliction real or perceived to love as you loved on the cross.
I
“One early evening in winter I was walking alone through the woods toward a town which I could already see and where I wanted to find lodging. Suddenly a big wolf came upon me and jumped at me. I had the woolen prayer rope which had belonged to my late starets in my hands, and in my attempt to defend myself with it the prayer rope slipped out of my hands and lodged around the neck of the wolf. The wolf jumped away from and got caught in a thorny bush with his hind legs and with the prayer rope on a branch of a dry tree. He tried desperately to free himself but was unable to because the prayer rope was choking him. With faith I blessed myself and went to free the wolf and especially to get my precious prayer rope, for I feared that the wolf would run away with it. And, sure enough, the moment I approached the wolf and touched the prayer rope, he broke it and ran away without leaving a trace. I thanked God for His help in retrieving my prayer rope and remembered my late starets. Then I happily reached the town and stopped at an inn to ask for lodging…
The clerk [of the inn] looked at me and asked, “Were you making prostrations so earnestly that you even broke your prayer rope?”
“No, it was not I who broke it; it was a wolf,” I said.
“Really? Do wolves pray?” asked the clerk.”
From The Way of a Pilgrim, trans. Helen Bacovcin
II
The famous Russian hermit and starets St. Seraphim of Sarov was one day visited at his hovel in the woods by an enormous bear. As his daily rations had recently arrived, the holy man, who was known to be a fastidious observer Christian hospitality, offered half of his food to his guest, . The next day the bear returned and St. Seraphim again shared his food. This happened throughout the winter and on into the spring. The bear prefered to eat at the saint’s table rather than hibernate. Soon, it was time for Great Lent. At that time, it was customary for the monk’s rations to be cut in half for those 40 days of fasting and repentance. So, when the bear continued to visit, St. Seraphim began giving the bear all of his rations, leaving nothing for himself. One day while this was going on, the Abbot visited St. Seraphim, and was astonished and frightened to discover a bear being fed and gently spoken to by the venerable old monk. When St. Seraphim explained that he had been giving his Lenten rations to the bear all along the Abbot got angry.
“You ought not to be doing this, and during Lent of all times!” he chided.
To which St. Seraphim replied, “But, Abbot, the poor bear does not know that it is Lent.”
What is your favorite story involving saints and animals?
Ha’Arets
March 1, 2010


A response to The Last Rainbow, an apocalyptic poem for lent by James Stambaugh.
The earth brought forth vegetation: plants yielding seed of every kind, and trees of every kind bearing fruit with the seed in it. And God saw that it was good.
Genesis 1:12
Speak to the people of Israel and say to them: When you enter the land that I am giving you, the land shall observe a sabbath for the Lord.
Leviticus 25:2
The earth lies polluted
under its inhabitants;
for they have transgressed laws,
violated the statutes,
broken the everlasting covenant.
Isaiah 24:5
O land, land, land,
hear the word of the Lord!
Jeremiah 22:29
The time is surely coming, says the Lord God,
when I will send a famine on the land;
not a famine of bread, or a thirst for water,
but of hearing the words of the Lord.
Amos 8:11
The Last Rainbow — An Apocalyptic
February 22, 2010
NOTE: It’s Lent, people; it’s supposed to be depressing.
No one remembers
When the last rainbow appeared.
Was it after that last oil spill?
The one that finally did the ocean in?
Was it after the last mountain was leveled?
Or when the last hill was slit open?
When the last of the mineral wealth was stolen?
Was it after the last forest was paved over?
After the last marsh was converted to overflow parking?
Or was it just before that delicate, unknown moment
When the scales were tipped ever so slightly,
And the air became so pregnant with poison
That that very last persistent little bird
Could not lift her petrol-slick wings in flight?
When did we break that age-old treaty
Between God and all humankind–
When God promised not to destroy the earth?
When did we take it upon ourselves
To do that which God would not do?
The last rainbow happened decades ago.
On Personal Lenten Observances
February 16, 2010
While some difference of opinion exists (when doesn’t it?), Lent is a season of reflection in the Anglican tradition. Of course, and rightly so, this season of reflection incorporates themes of self-examination and penitence. It is a time following the joy of the Advent and Epiphany seasons in which Christians contemplate core values and personal priorities in light of the sacrifice made by Christ for humanity’s sake. It is not a step backward from the proclamation of the Epiphany as much as it is a step inward in response both to the heavy burden promulgated by sin and to the appropriate actions of those set free from that sin by the coming triumph of the resurrection and ascension. Consequently, Lenten observances ought to be directed toward those ends, and will necessarily be highly individualized and deeply personal.
As such, I feel like my Lenten observances should take a few things into consideration (I guess you could say I have to do some preliminary reflection in preparation for a season of reflection, ironic).
/1/ What has been ruling my life this year? If experience has taught me anything, it is that I tend to fall into patterns of behavior. Last year, I realized that “funny” tends to rule my behavior. I had been willing to do or say many things simply because they were funny. I’m sure its easy to see how quickly this can become detrimental behavior, but it was also a tool I used to trivialize issues I felt were out of my control. What kinds of things/behaviors can I give up or practice that will bring those places in my heart back into submission to Christ?
/2/ What has been hindering my worship? I go through seasons in my life that are characterized by doubt or frustration. What kinds of things/behaviors can I give up or practice that will bring the broader picture of Christian worship back into focus for me?
/3/ How have I neglected the things God has called me to do in life? Because I live in a rich country and have many resources (family, friends, colleagues, as well as sufficient monetary means), I can get distracted. What kinds of things/behaviors can I give up or practice that will remind me to live for others and not for my own pleasure?
What kinds of things do you work through in your personal Lenten observances?
ABC Rowan Williams on Lent
March 1, 2009
Repententance & Ecstacy – A Lenten Reflection
February 26, 2009

A very high percentage of Pastors Kids end up falling away from faith. Some forever, some for a period of time after which they reluctantly come back because they would feel it a crime to keep their kids from the transcendence which they had experienced as a child.
The pressure can be pretty tough. You are expected to be perfect in all that you do. Having been raised in a small town, even people who don’t go to my church knew that I was a Pastor’s kid, and I was supposed to be different. Your zeal for God must be greater and more steady than the rank-and-file youth in the Youth Group. It is assumed you will be a leader of some sort whether in worship or prayer or whatever.
I was a sort of Renaissance PK. From when I was 15 I was “leading worship” for the Youth Group. I led prayer and bible study groups and I was the model of a holiness/pentecostal: I never swore, I never drank, I never smoked and I didn’t sleep around. Like Paul, I could (and did – in my head) say that I was “blameless” as goes the law. I don’t suppose that if I had ever been asked I would have said I was a “good” Christian, but I would be lying if I said that I wasn’t a little bit judgemental of Christians who weren’t as “good as me”.
Especially those Catholics and Lutherans with their drinking and un-evangelical way of talking about faith. All that “confirmation” and “eucharist,” sounds like idol worship to me, but whatever.
After high school I joined a “discipleship program” that the Assemblies has called “Master’s Commission.” I would describe it, but it is difficult to do, and I don’t much like to talk about those “lost years” of mine. Though, ironically, my experiences in this program were to forever change me.
One of the most intense moments of change was when a group of us took a trip down to Urbana Illinois to do “street witnessing” on the college campus there. There were several hundred people who gathered from various places around the country and we converged on the campus en masse. (Perhaps another day I can describe how all my “street witnessing” changed my idea of evangelism, but we’ll save that one) After a day of attempting to convince random college kids that they were destined for hell we would re-assemble at a local church and have good ole’ fashioned holy ghost services.
On one particular night the service focused on “repentance.” During the “altar time” people began to spontaneously confess their sins out loud to the congregation – Describing Pentecostal worship to those who have never partaken is rather like attempting to describe an alien world. Let’s just say that it is several hours of increasing emotional intensity. Though that is not entirely fair, it’s not pure “emotionalism;” but the senses are very involved and one does not need to pass everything over a “reasonableness-meter.” It is transcendent. – I was one who confessed aloud if you will; after which my pastor laid hands on me and began to pray.
I sort of “faked” being “slain in the Spirit” (where one falls down and lies semi-concious on the floor) once when I was a kid. I felt the need to sort of “be spiritual.” But I had since sworn off on the phenomenon. Over the years I had become increasingly uncomfortable with the more overt Pentecostal phenomenon. But on this night, without provocation, I felt weak after my pastor began to pray for me. I “fell back” and was laid out on my back. Lying there was sort of like being in a dream. I was able to see and sense all that was going on around me, but my mind was incredibly focused.
Though not audibly, but with that kind clarity, I was overwhelmed by a “voice,” but it wasn’t a voice.
(here I wish I had the ability of St. John of the Cross to poetically describe the experience, but I sort of suck at writing so bear with me). However one describes it I fel two very intense feelings simultaneously. I was, for the first time I can remember, completely aware of my sin. Perhaps I didn’t swear and drink, but I was filled with pride and arrogance. I almost felt like I was being shown a laundry list of my own sinfullness. Yet, at the same time, sort of like a flood of water over and around me, but warm and not wet, I was keenly aware of being unconditionally loved with a steadfast and indescribable fidelity.
From that day a lifetime of self-righteousness began to slowly chip away. It’s not done yet! But I know that had I not understood the need to be repentant, I could not love God or love my neighbor, or know that I was loved by God. Sometimes I had heard people speak this way before I had this experience and I would think that they just needed to live in grace. But it seems to me that the two are interconnected.
Receiving and living by grace is inseparable from a life of repentance, without which it is impossible not to judge others.
Repentance has had the effect of constantly reminding me how dependent I am and ever renews and restores right-relationship to God and my fellow Christian.
I hope not that a reader might get some sort of cliche mini-sermon attatched to a story, like some new seminary grad strategicaly using a story to communicate something other than the thrust of the narrative. In the end, the story of that night, of repentence, was the only thing that prepared me for new life, and I imagine that this prepared me to better appreciate Lent. This is in fact the first time I have ever actually taken on a “holy lent,” and I look forward to it.





