Saturday, February 28, 2009

He sets the bow in the clouds

I put up an entry on my personal blog on Wednesday. I just realised, upon reading this weekend's Mass readings yesterday, that it was the exact same passage I quoted in that entry. So I think it's fitting for me to share this with you.

On the way home (on Wednesday), I was blessed to see a rainbow across the sky, thanks to a colleague who pointed it out to me. I remembered the Word in Genesis that God gave us: He watches over us, and the sign He gives to remind us of that promise is a rainbow.

"I set my bow in the clouds to serve as a sign of the covenant between me and the earth. As the bow appears in the clouds, I will see it and recall the everlasting covenant that I have established [with] all living beings - all mortal creatures that are on earth ... This is the sign of the covenant I have established between me and all mortal creatures that are on earth." - Gn 9:13,16-17, NAB

We don't get to see rainbows as often as we see clouds. Perhaps it's God's way of telling us that while it is always easier to see ourselves suffering and easier to see the problems, it is only His love that makes everything worthwhile.

During Lent, we commemorate Jesus' own confrontation with the Devil. Led by the Spirit to walk with Him into the desert, we too will confront the devil who works hard to question our identiy and purpose. As we fast, abstain, give alms, confess and repent, we will go through some form of suffering. And while we go through this death to self, it will become important to see the meaning behind it all, to see the rainbow in the midst of all the clouds.

When we see a rainbow, it is His purposeful and willing sign and reminder of His everlasting love for us. As we approach the fifth day of our Lenten journey, let's remember not to do anything other than out of love and desire for Him.

Let's give thanks to a truly mighty God for choosing such an appropriate time (Ash Wednesday and the start of Quadragesima 2009) to remind us of why we desire to die to ourselves.

May we remember Him always, and may we remember that He remembers us.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Mommy's hypo

Today marks the start of Lent. As most of you probably did as well, my Mom fasted for the occassion.

She came home telling me about how she couldn't keep herself awake during the day and that she was so tired that she knocked out on the company bus on the way home. She ate bread almost as soon as she got home because she was absolutely famished.

Famished, tired and sleepy from not enough food. These symptoms sound a little too familiar to me. I told her, maybe you were experiencing a hypo. I'm a Type 1 diabetic and hypo, short for hypoglycaemia, is a condition that I face when my blood sugar level goes below the normal range. My symptoms are very much like that prior to a hypo – fatigue, hunger and sleepiness. When my blood sugars does get low, it gets a little more extreme and I would start to see white spots in my vision, tremble and would need to stop whatever I'm doing before I can resume whatever I was doing but that's another story.

It's not abnormal that people without diabetes experience symptoms of having low blood sugar. It's just that their body reacts accordingly to ensure that it doesn't result in a dramatic ending and raises the blood sugar by using the reserves stored up in the liver.

So if you did a fast today and felt like how my Mom felt, you pretty much had yourself a small experience of a hypo.

I do hope your start to Lent was great!



- posted on behalf of Rachel Er

Suffering is for good

There is an age-old problem that humanity faces - suffering. We don't like it, and we prefer not to have it. Yet it is not always about weather I have a choice or not. Many times, suffering and pain come without permission. Be it the death of someone special or a failure at work or in school, no one is immune to suffering.

Were we made for suffering? If God so loves us, why did He have to allow us to suffer? I think that suffering is on the flip-side, a measure of love. Love, in many cases, exposes itself to suffering. In Genesis, Adam was made to toil "painfully" all day for his food, and Eve was made to suffer pains at childbirth. Jesus suffered greatly at the end of His earthly life. Pain is evident in every aspect of life.

I suppose we were made to suffer to some extent. It is with pain, after all, that we realise more deeply the meaning of paradise. We wouldn't quite enjoy joy without the knowledge of what it feels like without joy. It is through suffering that we experience the demands and results of love.

If there is not a single person in the world who is free from the problem of suffering, then I suppose it's important to prepare oneself for suffering and make the best of it.

Still, infliction of pain is not necessarily love. In the past, I knew of people in school who would cut themselves over someone else. The pain, they explain with some degree of irony, helps to distract them what where it hurts the most - the heart. We all know that this is wrong. It doesn't make sense to suffer this way over a broken heart. What's the difference between the two "forms" of suffering?

One is self-centred, the other is self-less. When someone inflicts pain on himself for his own sake, it becomes doubly painful. The pain that he was trying to get rid of remains, added to the pain that he has just put on himself.

The other - the self-less form of suffering - defines love. It is redemptive. Adam and Eve did not choose to suffer for food and their children. But the punishment God imposed on them teaches us the meaning of redemptive suffering. It teaches that the toils we go through in school and at work comes with a prize: food on the table. It teaches a mother - when she carries a burden for nine months, and suffers for hours in labour - how precious that baby is. God allows suffering so that we appreciate the important things in life.

Jesus is as usual the primary example of redemptive suffering. Adam and Eve had no choice. But Jesus did - He was God incarnate. Yet, He chose to give in to His own will, and suffered for us. The punishment of sin is death, and God took it upon Himself to bear the weight of all our sins, and pay the penalty for humanity.

In the Book of Deuteronomy, the people of God were given a choice:

Moses said to the people: "Today I have set before you life and prosperity, death and doom. If you obey the commandments of the LORD, your God ... loving him, and walking in his ways, and keeping his commandments, statutes and decrees, you will live and grow. If, however, you turn away your hearts and will not listen, but are led astray and adore and serve other gods, I tell you now that you will certainly perish." - 30:15-18, NAB

That choice, between "walking in [God's] ways" and turning away from God, is what we are faced with everyday. And the promise remains: choosing God leads to life (v. 19-20).

This choice, of course, leads to suffering. If even Jesus "must suffer greatly and be rejected" (Lk 9:22), then we, who want to be with Christ "must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me" (v. 23).

During Lent, we, to an extent, follow Christ's choice to suffer. We too choose to suffer, to go without our favourite food, or to eat less, or to pray even more, or to spend less on ourselves in order to bless others. But it stands the risk of becoming a pointless self-infliction of pain. Pain and suffering must come with a cause. It must be redemptive. These must all add up to make us self-less, and less self-indulgent. There is only that much space in our hearts. It is only when we are empty of ourselves that Jesus can fill us, and make us instruments to share His message and love. Thus the promise: "Whoever loses his life for my sake will save it" (v. 24).

My dad, knowing how much I hated studying in the past, always told me: "If you hate studying, study hard now. Otherwise it will haunt you in future." It is pretty much a similar concept. We choose God, we suffer will suffer much on earth. In exchange, Jesus' promise to us is that "the one who perseveres to the end will be saved" (Matthew 24:13).

As we walk on this journey of suffering and self-denial, let us be like Jesus, led by the Spirit into the desert. Let us confront our sinfulness and empty ourselves of our pride and our ego. We prepare ourselves to embrace the cross, which embodies the enriching power of suffering and self-abandonment, and follow Him.

"Is it a grave matter to eat meat, knowingly and without necessity, on a Friday in Lent?"

Answered by Legionary of Christ Father Edward McNamara, professor of liturgy at the Regina Apostolorum university:

This is more related to moral theology than liturgy. There are sins in which the matter may be grave or not grave according to other circumstances. For example, stealing even a small sum would be grave matter if the thief knows the victim to be desperately poor and needy. It would not necessarily be grave matter, although still a sin, if it represented a slight loss.

Considering this, I would say that the act of eating meat on a Friday of Lent could be grave or venial according to other circumstances. If this act is carried out knowingly, without necessity in such a way that the Church's laws are openly despised and denigrated, then it would be grave matter and should be confessed as such.

However, there may be many circumstances that could mitigate the culpability. For example, in a religiously pluralistic society a Catholic could easily find himself invited to a gathering where refusing what was offered would deeply offend the host. Strictly speaking, he is knowingly and unnecessarily eating meat on a day of abstinence but finds himself in a social conundrum that would make his fault less grave.

Not that he is off the hook completely. A Catholic should foresee these situations and avoid them whenever possible. He should also be willing to testify and defend his faith. After all, precisely because we have a pluralistic society nobody ridicules Buddhists for vegetarianism nor Jews and Muslims for abstaining from pork. Therefore Catholics should be courageous and visible in observing our somewhat miniscule rules on the days the Church asks us to make a sacrifice.

See source.

I loved the last paragraph. :) No one ridicules other faiths for their dedication, we shouldn't allow our own faith to be ridiculed either.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Lenten Morning Prayer (anonymous)

Hey!

[This is] my Lenten morning prayer. I put one copy in my wallet so that I can carry it around.




- posted on behalf of Anonymous

"'Scuse me, you want tissue?"

That was an offer I got a few years back on an Ash Wednesday evening when I was in a train, on the way home. A concerned lady had noticed the obvious stain on my head, and out of generosity and kindness, she offered me a Kleenex.

Of course, she didn't know why I had ash-mark on my head.

It's ok if someone outside of the faith fails to understand why we would put ash somewhere on our body that is so public. It's ok if they think it's ludicrous that we don't wipe them off. What is not ok, however, is if we who receive the ashes do not know why.

So why do we have to set apart a day to have ash imposed on our heads? Of course, one of the key reasons is that mourning and repentance were represented by fasting, wearing sack cloth, sitting in dust and ashes, and putting dust and ashes on the head. For me, there are three reasons that make the imposition of the cross a richly meaningful experience, every time.

Harmless dirt outside, harmful dirt inside.
One of the most common observances about the ashes is that it's dirty. But I think that hits the bulls' eye. Are we not smudged in sin anyway? How is it that we care so much for the tiny stain on the top of the head and not bother to remove the larger stain that resides in the heart? Paul wore a T-shirt on Sunday that he was so proud of, he made us take a photo of it. The T-shirt read: "The toughest stains are those that reside in the heart". How very true. The ashes represent the burden of sin we carry in our lives. It is the same burden that will add on to the Lord's load on the way to His death. We ought not to be ashamed of having ashes on our heads. We ought to be ashamed of the dirt we leave in our hearts. When we wash them off upon at home tonight, may we make a silent profession to the Lord:

Lord, the stain on my forehead does no damage to me, yet I am vain to make sure it doesn't embarrass me. The stains on my heart no one can see but You. They do so much damage to me, yet I haven't washed them off quickly enough. As I wash off these ashes, I promise You I will also humble myself and wash away my sins by Your love.

I belong to someone, and it isn't myself.
A mark on the forehead is a representation of ownership. When we mark ourselves with the sign of the cross, we declare that we belong to the Lord - we do not belong to our work, we do not belong to our leisure, we do not belong to ourselves. Rev 7:3 describes the "servants of God" as having been sealed on their foreheads. Seven chapters later in Rev 14:1, we find that the mark on these servants' heads was "[the Lamb's] name and His Father's name". In quite stark contrast, Rev 13:16 reveals that the servants of "the beast" also have "a mark on his right hand or on his forehead", and the mark was "the name of the beast" (v. 17). When we see the ashes on our heads, we must remember who'd boss. The ship can only have one captain. Do you follow the captain's directions or are you your own captain?

Lord, you are the captain of my ship, the King of my heart. Remind me that I belong to You, and that I can trust You as leader, to do the best for me.

The reality of man: all in all, I am nothing.
Ashes are also a reminder of our reality. We are but dust. Ash would be all we are if we are burned up. Yet, God fashioned us to such beautiful creatures, with intellect and will to know and choose right from wrong. Many a times, however, I get over my head and get tempted into thinking that I made me what I am. The ashes remind me of what God told Adam in Genesis 3:19: "… dust you are, and to dust you will return". That God can make me what I am out of dust, simply leaves me in awe of Him.

You are the Creator of all things good. Yet, I choose to reject the certainty of your plans for my plans that are uncertain. Remind me, Lord, of what I truly am without You, so that I will turn my will towards You.

The Lord protects
Biblical evidence also point to "the mark" as a symbol of protection. Cain, even as he suffered punishment for killing his brother, also enjoyed God's protection (Gn 4). But I think particularly relevant for us in this season, Ezekiel also points out God's protection for those who lament over sin: "Go throughout the city of Jerusalem and put a mark on the foreheads of those who grieve and lament over all the detestable things that are done in it" (9:4). No one was to be spared, except "anyone who [had] the mark" (v. 6).

Lord, You personally watch over every sinner who laments his sin and desires to see change. You will help those who turn away from themselves and who turn to You. May the ashes on our foreheads be, along with all our acts of penance this Lent, a sign of our desire to change.

This leads us to today's first reading, where we see Jonah dragging his feet to announce the upcoming destruction of Nineveh. The people of Nineveh, to the disgust of Jonah, listened, repented and believed. They also engaged in exterior acts of penance to show how repentant their hearts were. They never took God's mercy and forgiveness for granted. They dared not seek to exchange their acts for forgiveness. "Who knows? God may yet relent…" (Jonah 3:9) was their best hope.

God did relent, as he inspired the writer to say. He relented because "when God saw what they did and how they turned from their evil ways, he had compassion" (v. 10).

So you see, the ashes on our heads are not some gimmicky way of spreading the faith. It is the symbol of the fact that we are poor sinners, precisely bad ambassadors to His Name. Yet, it's a symbol of how much He still gives and loves you and I.

As we have ashes put on our heads today, I pray that we recognise the real interior problems. That we realise the harsh reality of our nothingness, and that we belong to the only one who can make us into something. May the Lord see what we do; may He see how we turn away from evil, and show us compassion.

My Lenten commitment (Hilary)

Here's my Lenten prayer to the Lord - the one I just used to kick off Quadragesima 2009, and the one I will be saying each morning at my rising.
















It reads:
"Lord, I offer You all my suffering and all my joy. I offer You my very self. It is only You that draws me to want to change, and only You who can change me through and through. Help me live out my Lenten commitments; I ask You to be the focal point of my heart and [of] my life. Amen."

Anyone want to share yours? Email here or just share your prayer in the comments segment.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Kick off!

Hi guys!

Thank you for journeying together this Lent!

We're and hour and a half away from the kick-off, and I'd like to encourage you to start off Lent 2009 with a prayer. May I invite you, AT MIDNIGHT SHARP, to write a simple commitment to the Lord and place it somewhere visible as a reminder of our journey together? Dedicate Quadragesima to Him: it is He who stirred your heart to taking this challenge, and it will be Him who will strengthen you when you call on Him!

After you write your card, say just ONE decade of the Rosary (non-Catholics may sing a song or say the Lord's Prayer), and spend a few moments with Him.

After that, you may proceed with the rest of your evening.

For THOSE WHO HAVEN'T RESPONDED, no pressure. It is never too late to join us on this walk. Do feel free to accept this invitation anytime before 9 April.

God bless each of you, and here's to a fruitful Lent ahead. May He become greater, and we, become less!

Monday, February 23, 2009

Notes and disclaimers

1. What's a day of fast?
A day of fast is one on which Catholics who are 18- to 60-years-old are required to keep a limited fast.

2. Who is invited to Quadragesima?
Any christian who desires to journey together as a community, who wants to die to himself/herself, and who wants to gain a deeper appreciation for the love of God.

3. Can I invite my friend?
Of course! As long as he/she meets the above conditions.

4. What if I can’t fulfill everything?
No bans, no fines, just try. This is not a place for Saints. It's a place for sinners. We're here to help one another and push one another on in the journey.

5. Will I see Christ after this?
No one can promise you'll see Christ, but a sincere heart will certainly make us more self-less, which naturally gives God more room to work in our lives.

6. Will I get to Heaven by doing this?
Life is a much bigger journey.

7. Am I saving myself from damnation by doing this?
This is not the focus of the journey. We're here to focus on God, not on ourselves.

8. Huh? I’m Keh-klick, so must do this ah? Sian Lei.
Of course not. No one is obliged to join me. I'm simply inviting you to.

9. Where is this held?
There is no particular venue. Fasting, prayer and almsgiving is done wherever you are; Ash Wednesday and Holy Thursday services at any Catholic Church (or at home if you're not a non-Catholic Christian). Confession is also available at parishes.

All other acts of penance @ Quadragesima

The point of Quadragesima is for us all to journey together in support of one another towards Christ. He is the only reason we're doing this. In the period of Lent, 26 Feb - 9 Apr 2009,
we make efforts to join our sufferings to that of the Lord.

Based on your own abilities, choose one from two or three choices for penance - prayer, fasting, abstinence and almsgiving - available (challenge yourself moderately! Muscles grow with a little strain). While you may choose to moderate, I suggest you don’t, for two reasons:
  1. Since, we’re doing this together, we might as well try to do the same penance together;
  2. This standardisation also means I cannot make things easier for myself.

In addition, the following three events are key to our commitment together:

1. Ash Wednesday, 25 Feb 2009

To start our journey together, we attend Ash Wednesday Mass/service in Church. Whichever parish you belong to, attend service, together with the rest of the Body of Christ. Aptly, we will begin with ash marked on our foreheads, ashamed for every sin that pinned Jesus tighter on the cross.

If you are a non-Catholic Christian: Read and meditate on Mark 1:12-15 and Matthew 6:1-6, 16-18. Ask the Lord for the focus to set your sights on Him, and the strength to resist the devil when temptations come.

2. Confession, any time during Lent
Promise to go for a good confession during our journey together.

If you are a non-Catholic Christian: On a daily basis, take note of your shortcomings at the end of each night, and promise the Lord that you’ll repent and become a better ambassador of His Name.

3. Holy Thursday, 9 Apr 2009
We end our journey together with Holy Thursday Mass/service in Church. Whichever parish you belong to, attend service, and spend time in prayer, giving thanks for all we’ve been through, and for the immeasurable love that He has already given us.

If you are a non-Catholic Christian: Read and meditate on 1 Corinthians 11:23-26 and John 13:1-15. Spend some time reflecting on the reality of the suffering and death that Jesus had to go through for us in order to atone for our sins. Ask the Lord for the focus to set your sights on Him, and the strength to resist the devil when temptations come in future.

Abstinence @ Quadragesima

In this season of sacrifice*, we give up what is good for what is best!

Catholics 14 years and older are bound to abstain from meat on all the Fridays of Lent, and on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday. No meat may be eaten on days of abstinence. Fish meat is fine.

Pregnant and nursing mothers are exempt.

*Sacrifice: From Latin sacrificium, from sacer (sacred), and ficium (deed), from the verb facere (do or make).

In addition
The following are not prescribed by the Church, but try to do one on our journey.

Choice A: The Fridays of Lent are days of abstinence. As faithful Catholics we abstain from meat on Fridays during Lent. If you are vegetarian or hate meat, add one more thing to abstain from, on each of the coming Fridays.

Choice B: Abstain from meat on Fridays during Lent. In addition, give up something you enjoy on every one of the 40 days. That means no touching it at all (anything from chocolates to movies to chocolates - mass or prayer is not counted!)

Choice C: Make holy all your leisure time. Sacrifice your favourite TV shows or favourite novels, and spend the time on spiritual reading.

If you are a non-Catholic Christian: Choice A, B or C.

Almsgiving @ Quadragesima

Almsgiving is...
... any material favour done to assist the needy, and prompted by charity. We do not do so to boast of our riches; we merely share what God has given to us with our fellow brothers and sisters.

Choice A: Make conscious attempts to fast on Thursdays, and give the money you saved ($5 if you don’t usually need to spend on food) anonymously to any charitable organisation.

Choice B: Set aside $10-20 (set an amount and stick with it) as an offertory at each of the coming Sunday Masses.

Choice C: Save $1-3 every day (set an amount and stick with it) throughout our entire journey together, and give the lump sum to any good charitable organisation (this organisation should be one that helps the needy).

If you are a non-Catholic Christian: Choice A or C.

Fasting @ Quadragesima

Catholics from age 18 through age 59 are bound to fast on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.

Quadragesima sojourners will fast together every Thursday - Thursday will be Quadragesima fasting day! So prepare your hearts (and your tummies) for a full day of fast each week. You may choose to fast on mare days if you wish.

Pregnant and nursing mothers are exempt. You're also exempted if you're not feeling well. Health comes first. No need to "make up" after your recovery.

Fasting means...
... having only one full meal to maintain one's strength. Two smaller, meatless and penitential meals are permitted according to one's needs, but they should not together equal the one full meal. Eating solid foods between meals is not permitted.

Faster choose your Fast...

1. Fast Fast One: You may eat one normal (nothing extra rice, etc, added) meal and have two small portion bites, provided these snacks do not add up to a second meal.

2. Fast Fast, Too: Eat nothing more than three slices of plain bread and water until 7pm – then have a normal portion dinner.

If you are a non-Catholic Christian: Choice A or B.

Prayer @ Quadragesima

Choice A - Lite:
  • Write on a card a prayer of commitment to God. On it tell Him your desire to grow closer to Him and ask Him to strengthen you in all your trials for the coming day. Everyday, upon waking up, read the prayer and offer yourself to the Lord.
  • Read the Gospel passage for the day and meditate on the text. Spend minimum 15 minutes in prayer (day or night). If you finish early, remain in silence as a dedication of your time to God.
  • Fast on Thursdays and spend lunch-time praying a decade of the Rosary for others. Before you begin, lift up those you would like to offer up in prayer.

Choice B - Intermediate:
  • Write on a card a prayer of commitment to God. On it tell Him your desire to grow closer to Him and ask Him to strengthen you in all your trials for the coming day. Everyday, upon waking up, read the prayer and offer yourself to the Lord.
  • Choose one Book of the Bible and read a chapter each evening. If the Book finished before our journey together, start on another Book.
  • Fast on Thursdays and spend lunch-time praying five decades of the Rosary for others. You might want to dedicate each decade for a group of people (my suggestion: 1. Unborn Babies, 2. The Poor and Needy, 3. Friends and Family, 4. Those who have no one to pray for them, and 5. Self).

Choice C - Powerhouse:
  • Morning (Lauds), at dawn or upon rising;
  • Write on a card a prayer of commitment to God. On it tell Him your desire to grow closer to Him and ask Him to strengthen you in all your trials for the coming day. Everyday, upon waking up, read the prayer and offer yourself to the Lord.
  • Fast on Thursdays and spend lunch-time praying five decades of the Rosary for others. You might want to dedicate each decade for a group of people (my suggestion: 1. Unborn Babies, 2. The Poor and Needy, 3. Friends and Family, 4. Those who have no one to pray for them, and 5. Self).
  • Evening (Vespers), at sundown or upon return from work/school
  • Read the Word of God daily, and meditate on
  • Night Prayer (Compline), before retiring for the night

If you are a non-Catholic Christian:
  • Write on a card a prayer of commitment to God. On it tell Him your desire to grow closer to Him and ask Him to strengthen you in all your trials for the coming day. Everyday, upon waking up, read the prayer and offer yourself to the Lord.
  • Pick a Gospel and follow it though (bit by bit) consistently throughout the 40 days. Read and pray the Word in the morning. After reading, offer up your day to God and promise to live by His Word
  • Pick a Letter of St Paul and follow it though (bit by bit) consistently throughout the 40 days. Read and pray the Word in the evening. Before reading, evaluate yourself: what did the Word of God ask of me at the start of the day? How did I live it?

Introduction to Quadragesima 2009

Lent is an integral part of the Catholic liturgical calendar. Together with Advent, Lent is a season to help us prepare ourselves for key events in the Church’s life – the incarnation of God (Christmas) and the death and resurrection of our Lord (Easter).

The call
But Lent does not have to be just for Catholics. The idea of remembering Christ's sacrifices for us and the idea of dying to self are things that all Christians share!

Let us together put God above ourselves – “He must become greater; I must become less” (John 3:30), and we put into practice His call to love one another in His Body. We put our love for Him to action, by putting Him above our personal wants and desires. We put our trust to Him in action - through fasting, prayer and almsgiving (Matthew 6).

We take these 40 days to humbly acknowledge our sinfulness. For the many times we have ignored what His voice, we do penance and cry out to Him in thanksgiving for His mercy to those who repent.

If we desire to become more Christ-centred, and indeed more Christ-like, we must die to ourselves and focus on Him who gives life, on Him who is life itself. “Unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds. The man who loves his life will lose it, while the man who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life.” – John 12:24-25

The challenge
In his Lent 2009 message release on 3 Feb, our Holy Father B16 noted that we've been given "three penitential practices that are very dear to the biblical and Christian tradition - prayer, almsgiving, fasting - to prepare us to better celebrate Easter".

The challenge is to take upon ourselves the three practices as Matthew 6 points out. B16 reminded us that doing these acts with heart "dispels all evil, washes guilt away, restores lost innocence, brings mourners joy, casts out hatred, brings us peace and humbles earthly pride".

The invitation
I would like to invite you to join me on this Lenten journey, walking to become better children of God.

Non-Catholic Christians, you are also invited to join us. There are differences. This is not the place to compare those differences, but to see the similarities: we are all sinners who desire to give God every part of ourselves. By taking part in this, we hope you can gain a deeper appreciation of Christ's love for us all.

The acts of penance

Pope's 2009 Lenten message

Dear Brothers and Sisters!

At the beginning of Lent, which constitutes an itinerary of more intense spiritual training, the Liturgy sets before us again three penitential practices that are very dear to the biblical and Christian tradition -- prayer, almsgiving, fasting -- to prepare us to better celebrate Easter and thus experience God's power that, as we shall hear in the Paschal Vigil, "dispels all evil, washes guilt away, restores lost innocence, brings mourners joy, casts out hatred, brings us peace and humbles earthly pride" (Paschal Præconium). For this year's Lenten Message, I wish to focus my reflections especially on the value and meaning of fasting. Indeed, Lent recalls the forty days of our Lord's fasting in the desert, which He undertook before entering into His public ministry. We read in the Gospel: "Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. He fasted for forty days and forty nights, and afterwards he was hungry" (Mt 4,1-2). Like Moses, who fasted before receiving the tablets of the Law (cf. Ex 34,28) and Elijah's fast before meeting the Lord on Mount Horeb (cf. 1 Kings 19,8), Jesus, too, through prayer and fasting, prepared Himself for the mission that lay before Him, marked at the start by a serious battle with the tempter.

We might wonder what value and meaning there is for us Christians in depriving ourselves of something that in itself is good and useful for our bodily sustenance. The Sacred Scriptures and the entire Christian tradition teach that fasting is a great help to avoid sin and all that leads to it. For this reason, the history of salvation is replete with occasions that invite fasting. In the very first pages of Sacred Scripture, the Lord commands man to abstain from partaking of the prohibited fruit: "You may freely eat of every tree of the garden; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall die" (Gn 2, 16-17). Commenting on the divine injunction, Saint Basil observes that "fasting was ordained in Paradise," and "the first commandment in this sense was delivered to Adam." He thus concludes: "'You shall not eat' is a law of fasting and abstinence" (cf. Sermo de jejunio: PG 31, 163, 98). Since all of us are weighed down by sin and its consequences, fasting is proposed to us as an instrument to restore friendship with God. Such was the case with Ezra, who, in preparation for the journey from exile back to the Promised Land, calls upon the assembled people to fast so that "we might humble ourselves before our God" (8,21). The Almighty heard their prayer and assured them of His favor and protection. In the same way, the people of Nineveh, responding to Jonah's call to repentance, proclaimed a fast, as a sign of their sincerity, saying: "Who knows, God may yet repent and turn from his fierce anger, so that we perish not?" (3,9). In this instance, too, God saw their works and spared them.

In the New Testament, Jesus brings to light the profound motive for fasting, condemning the attitude of the Pharisees, who scrupulously observed the prescriptions of the law, but whose hearts were far from God. True fasting, as the divine Master repeats elsewhere, is rather to do the will of the Heavenly Father, who "sees in secret, and will reward you" (Mt 6,18). He Himself sets the example, answering Satan, at the end of the forty days spent in the desert that "man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God" (Mt 4,4). The true fast is thus directed to eating the "true food," which is to do the Father's will (cf. Jn 4,34). If, therefore, Adam disobeyed the Lord's command "of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat," the believer, through fasting, intends to submit himself humbly to God, trusting in His goodness and mercy.

The practice of fasting is very present in the first Christian community (cf. Acts 13,3; 14,22; 27,21; 2 Cor 6,5). The Church Fathers, too, speak of the force of fasting to bridle sin, especially the lusts of the "old Adam," and open in the heart of the believer a path to God. Moreover, fasting is a practice that is encountered frequently and recommended by the saints of every age. Saint Peter Chrysologus writes: "Fasting is the soul of prayer, mercy is the lifeblood of fasting. So if you pray, fast; if you fast, show mercy; if you want your petition to be heard, hear the petition of others. If you do not close your ear to others, you open God's ear to yourself" (Sermo 43: PL 52, 320. 322).

In our own day, fasting seems to have lost something of its spiritual meaning, and has taken on, in a culture characterized by the search for material well-being, a therapeutic value for the care of one's body. Fasting certainly bring benefits to physical well-being, but for believers, it is, in the first place, a "therapy" to heal all that prevents them from conformity to the will of God. In the Apostolic Constitution Pænitemini of 1966, the Servant of God Paul VI saw the need to present fasting within the call of every Christian to "no longer live for himself, but for Him who loves him and gave himself for him, he will also have to live for his brethren" (cf. Ch. I). Lent could be a propitious time to present again the norms contained in the Apostolic Constitution, so that the authentic and perennial significance of this long held practice may be rediscovered, and thus assist us to mortify our egoism and open our heart to love of God and neighbor, the first and greatest Commandment of the new Law and compendium of the entire Gospel (cf. Mt 22, 34-40).

The faithful practice of fasting contributes, moreover, to conferring unity to the whole person, body and soul, helping to avoid sin and grow in intimacy with the Lord. Saint Augustine, who knew all too well his own negative impulses, defining them as "twisted and tangled knottiness" (Confessions, II, 10.18), writes: "I will certainly impose privation, but it is so that he will forgive me, to be pleasing in his eyes, that I may enjoy his delightfulness" (Sermo 400, 3, 3: PL 40, 708). Denying material food, which nourishes our body, nurtures an interior disposition to listen to Christ and be fed by His saving word. Through fasting and praying, we allow Him to come and satisfy the deepest hunger that we experience in the depths of our being: the hunger and thirst for God.

At the same time, fasting is an aid to open our eyes to the situation in which so many of our brothers and sisters live. In his First Letter, Saint John admonishes: "If anyone has the world's goods, and sees his brother in need, yet shuts up his bowels of compassion from him -- how does the love of God abide in him?" (3,17). Voluntary fasting enables us to grow in the spirit of the Good Samaritan, who bends low and goes to the help of his suffering brother (cf. Encyclical Deus caritas est, 15). By freely embracing an act of self-denial for the sake of another, we make a statement that our brother or sister in need is not a stranger. It is precisely to keep alive this welcoming and attentive attitude towards our brothers and sisters that I encourage the parishes and every other community to intensify in Lent the custom of private and communal fasts, joined to the reading of the Word of God, prayer and almsgiving. From the beginning, this has been the hallmark of the Christian community, in which special collections were taken up (cf. 2 Cor 8-9; Rm 15, 25-27), the faithful being invited to give to the poor what had been set aside from their fast (Didascalia Ap., V, 20,18). This practice needs to be rediscovered and encouraged again in our day, especially during the liturgical season of Lent.

From what I have said thus far, it seems abundantly clear that fasting represents an important ascetical practice, a spiritual arm to do battle against every possible disordered attachment to ourselves. Freely chosen detachment from the pleasure of food and other material goods helps the disciple of Christ to control the appetites of nature, weakened by original sin, whose negative effects impact the entire human person. Quite opportunely, an ancient hymn of the Lenten liturgy exhorts: "Utamur ergo parcius, / verbis cibis et potibus, / somno, iocis et arctius / perstemus in custodia" (Let us use sparingly words, food and drink, sleep and amusements. May we be more alert in the custody of our senses).

Dear brothers and sisters, it is good to see how the ultimate goal of fasting is to help each one of us, as the Servant of God Pope John Paul II wrote, to make the complete gift of self to God (cf. Encyclical "Veritatis splendor," 21). May every family and Christian community use well this time of Lent, therefore, in order to cast aside all that distracts the spirit and grow in whatever nourishes the soul, moving it to love of God and neighbor. I am thinking especially of a greater commitment to prayer, lectio divina, recourse to the Sacrament of Reconciliation and active participation in the Eucharist, especially the Holy Sunday Mass. With this interior disposition, let us enter the penitential spirit of Lent. May the Blessed Virgin Mary, "Causa nostrae laetitiae," accompany and support us in the effort to free our heart from slavery to sin, making it evermore a "living tabernacle of God." With these wishes, while assuring every believer and ecclesial community of my prayer for a fruitful Lenten journey, I cordially impart to all of you my Apostolic Blessing.

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Sunday, February 22, 2009

Prayer of consecration

Lord, I consecrate this Blog and this Lenten effort that is Quadragesima 2009 to You. May all content in this site be holy and inspired by You. May all of us who gather for this big challenge strive to love You.

Lord, we are nothing without You, and we deserve nothing from You, yet You chose to take on human flesh and You chose to carry our burden. Make us more like You and help every one of us grow closer to You through Quadragesima.

Amen.