Bulletin PostsEventsLentThe 23rd Times

Feb 23rd, 2019 | The 23rd Times

By February 20, 2019 No Comments

Preparing for Lent

by: Cynthia Genovese – Catholic News

Anything worth doing is worth preparing for. Just imagine that this Lent is going to be different from every other Lent you’ve experienced. Imagine that there will be many graces offered to you this year. Imagine that God is going to help transform your life with greater freedom, greater joy, deeper desires for love and service. If you want it, you will choose it.

Lent can be a wonderful season of grace for us if we give ourselves to it. So, in this time before Lent, we need to prepare our hearts. We need to prepare by realizing how much we want to grow in freedom, how much we need to lighten our spirits and experience some real joy, and how much some parts of our lives really need changing.

So, preparing our hearts is a process of preparing our desires. This means practicing our sense of anticipation. If you imagine Lent as an “ordeal” or a time you dread in some way, then you’ve already pre-disposed yourself to not get very much out of it. Lent is a time to start anticipating something wonderful that is about to happen.

DOWNLOAD THE BULLETIN

Our sense of excitement and anticipation will grow more easily if we begin to imagine what God wants to give us. If we get too focused on ourselves, and what we are going to do or not do, we could risk missing the gift God wants to give us. We have to be aware of the fact that grace comes from God. This is about God’s great desire to bless us. Then, it is easier for us to imagine what we really want and to place ourselves in a space to receive what God wants to give us.

Taking some time to get ready for Lent will ensure that we aren’t going to miss the first week or two of Lent, because we are just getting started. Lent begins on Ash Wednesday, March 6, but we want to be ready to really take off on that day, rather than just beginning to think about Lent on that day. Part of what makes a vacation or a special anniversary so special is the build-up to it.

Before we get to Ash Wednesday, we should start asking ourselves some questions and we should start with some preparations. “What does God want to give me this year?” This question may require that I slow down a bit and listen to my inner spirit. For example, even if you’re very busy, you realize you’re hungry when you hear your stomach start “growling.” “What are you going to be doing on Ash Wednesday?” Too often, Ash Wednesday is like every other day, except that people manage to get to church and get ashes on their forehead. Is there anything else you can do on Ash Wednesday? How will fasting and abstaining happen for you and your family on that special day?

Lent is not something you need to do alone. If you have a spouse, children, some close friends or distant e-mail companions, you can begin now to talk about how we can support each other in this Lenten journey. The anticipation and the preparation is transformed with the companionship of family and close friends. We shouldn’t be deterred by the fear that our spouse, children or friends “won’t be into it.” Jesus said, “Fear is useless; what’s needed is trust.” Let’s begin now to tell others about our desires. Let’s help support others’ expectations. Let’s help others see that Lent doesn’t have to be something to avoid, and certainly can’t be reduced to “giving up candy.” We can help our loved ones to begin to imagine what they could receive from God in these days.

Ash Wednesday is a great place to start with our planning. “What are we going to eat?” We shouldn’t be embarrassed if we really haven’t fasted in a long time, or perhaps ever before. We can plan to intentionally have only one full meal on Ash Wednesday. We can make that meal very meaningful and symbolic. And, it can mean lots of choices.

As we prepare for Lent, we can read some of the resources here that give concrete ideas of ways to get ready to begin. Choosing Lent, Acting Lent gives a number of ways we can enter Lent with our whole selves, – as body-persons, who use our senses to help us experience things deeply. The symbols in our home, and the concrete choices we make can shape the way we will begin Lent, as individuals and as a family.

It doesn’t take a lot of time to prepare for the beginning of Lent. It just takes desire and focus. God can do so much with that. We can give God more of a space to touch our hearts if we begin to establish some simple patterns. We can wake up each morning, and for something like a half a minute to a minute, stand by the edge of our beds, and just ask the Lord for the grace to let this day be one in which I long for the beginning of Lent. Perhaps we need to ask for specific helps or graces to get ready to begin Lent. Whatever we try to say, our Lord can understand the Spirit trying to speak through our simple words. And all it takes is the time to find and put on our slippers. And each night, in the week ahead, we can practice giving thanks to God before you go to bed. This simple pattern, in the morning and evening can stir our spirits to look forward to and prepare for Lent, as a season of grace. May our Lord bless us all on this journey ahead.