I have written One Bread, One Body for about twenty years. Most of the time I have written these daily teachings in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament. Occasionally, I have to write these teachings on airplanes and at other sundry locations. Today, on this first day of Lent, I write from my hospital bed with an IV in my arm, as I await potential surgery.
Today, throughout the world, many millions of Catholics hear the sobering words: Remember, man, that you are dust, and unto dust you shall return. A hospital bed is a good place to appreciate this command and statement. A hospital bed is a good place to hear another command: Yet even now, says the Lord, return to Me with your whole heart, with fasting, and weeping, and mourning (Jl 2:12). We know we should repent. But is it actually a matter of life or death, of salvation or damnation? A hospital bed is a good place to hear the wonderful promise: Now is the acceptable time! Now is the day of salvation! (2 Cor 6:2) In the hospital, now tends to mean more than tomorrow. A hospital bed is a good place to begin Lent and take God so dead seriously that we enter more fully into eternal life.
Have the holiest Lent ever, the Lent of a lifetime, a springtime of your life in the Spirit.