The Church of England

Why keep Lent?

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Lent about? One word used by those who observe Lent is ‘preparatio­n’. Lent is about three preparatio­ns.

Easter, with its message of Christ destroying sin and death through his death and resurrecti­on, is the most exciting moment in the Church’s year. Yet we can undercut this note of victory by being so occupied that, amid the frantic busyness of our lives, we carelessly stumble upon Easter. Lent provides us with 40 days’ build-up to Good Friday and Easter Sunday that forces us to prayerfull­y ponder the death and resurrecti­on of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

As the best way to appreciate a sunrise is to be there in the darkness before dawn, so the only way to appreciate Easter is to have come to it through Lent. We as Christians are, of course, an Easter people living in a Good Friday world.

Secondly, A fatal flaw in our culture today is that people do not know how to say ‘no’ to bad things. It is now almost a virtue to give in to every desire that comes upon us. Yet a great element in Christian morality is to be able to say no to wrong desires. Paul, in Titus 2:11-12, says this: “For the grace of God has appeared that offers salvation to all people. It teaches us to say ‘No’ to ungodlines­s and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives.”

Lent gives us the opportunit­y to practice resisting harmful and hurtful desires that will continue for life. Trivial as it may appear, a battle won over chocolate or coffee at Lent may help us win a war over lust, lying or loving shortly afterwards.

Finally, If you take Lent seriously, then these 40 days can seem to be a long and often wearying season in which we never get our own way. Here, for a time, pleasures are put to one side and joys are postponed. But Lent doesn’t last. The darkness is broken by the joyful light of the glorious triumph of Easter Day. Here there is a splendid parallel with our lives.

For many of us, much of our life seems to take place in what we might call ‘Lent mode’: things do not go as we hope, we do not get what we want and our joys are absent or at best short-lived. Yet, for the Christian, there is that wonderful and certain hope that however deep and hard the darkness is in our lives, it will ultimately be lifted and replaced by an indestruct­ible joy.

For those who love Christ, life’s long Lent will end, one day, in an eternal Easter in which death and sin are destroyed for ever.

Whether or not you keep Lent – and in what way you keep it – is your choice. But to keep Lent, thoughtful­ly and prayerfull­y, is to come into a rich and lasting inheritanc­e. Be blessed this Lent and bless others!

Shalom

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