Posted on 03/05/2014 9:59:59 AM PST by Kaslin
Rhythm is life giving. We function according to days, weeks, months and years. We celebrate anniversaries and birthdays, dread tax time and look forward to time off. The cycles we go through help us move forward and stay in sync with the people around us. They increase both our productivity and our enjoyment of life, and they are essential to the health of our society.
We see this truth throughout the natural world as well. Our calendars and timetables are based on seasons and phases, the perfectly predictable movement of our planet and moon through space.
Rhythm is a form of structure. In music, rhythm is the structural support for the melody. Organization provides space for creativity and beauty.
Even plants need structure to grow. Vines without a trellis rot in a heap on the ground. But with a little support, they receive air and light and are able to produce fruit.
In the same way, spiritual health requires rhythm and structure. For centuries, religious communities around the world have operated according to spiritual calendars that direct believers to participate in certain disciplines, celebrations and ceremonies.
Sometimes, when we arent paying attention, these calendar days sneak up on us. And we are often tempted to forego significant days in favor of our to-do lists. But our busyness causes us to miss out on some of lifes greatest gifts.
Today is Ash Wednesday. Unlike Christmas and Easter or even Mardi Gras, this "holy day" is often overlooked. Most of us overlook it for one of two reasons: we dont understand it, or we prefer to only celebrate the fun holidays. I have found this to be particularly true among Protestants (of which I am one) who often seem to have missed out on the blessings of the full Lent and Easter seasons.
Well guess what? When you finish reading, well both be out of excuses.
How to Save Your Family: Understand and Take Part
Ash Wednesday marks the first day of Lent, which is meant to prepare our hearts and minds for the joy of Easter. You wouldnt show up to church on Easter Sunday without being dressed for it, so why not prepare your soul for the occasion as well?
When we think of Lent, the first thing that comes to mind is giving something up. We often wrongly associate this sacrifice with the idea that it will allow us to indentify with the sacrifice Jesus made on the cross, or we treat the self-denial as something akin to a New Years resolution.
The true purpose of lent is so much deeper and so much more spiritual.
The whole premise behind Christianity is claiming Jesus as Savior and Redeemer. Why we would ever do that unless we first realize a need for a savior? What do we need saving from? Why would we need to be redeemed?
No one becomes a Christian without first recognizing their own deep inner brokenness and desiring wholeness. True Christians approach the joy of their faith with humble hearts. To truly experience salvation and healing, we must come face to face with the things we spend most of our lives running from.
And what is the number one thing we spend our lives trying to avoid? Death. As a culture, we are so afraid of old age, of sickness, trauma and death. Yet we know our lives will end with some combination of the above.
We also spend our lives running from our mistakes and all of their consequences.
Ash Wednesday is a solemn holiday that begs us to consider lifes seriousness. During lent, we intentionally give up the distractions we run to while we run from the hard truths of life.
This is why a traditional Ash Wednesday service involves receiving a mark of ash on your forehead and hearing the words from Genesis, You were made from dust, and to dust you will return.
The service may also include a prayer from the Psalms, Lord, remind me how brief my time on earth will be. Remind me that my days are numbered, and that my life is fleeing away.
From Ash Wednesday to Easter, we commit to searching our hearts. Instead of feasting at parties, we let ourselves be hungry and we remember our need. We choose to spend time and energy in prayer and meditation, reading and seeking truth, ready to let God reveal our weaknesses, ready for our hearts to soften and break from the knowledge of our own sinfulness. Then God is able to reshape our hearts, our relationships and our lives.
2 Corinthians says, the kind of sorrow God wants us to experience leads us away from sin and results in salvation. Theres no regret for that kind of sorrow.
That is why the Lord says, Turn to me now, while there is time. Give me your hearts. Come with fasting, weeping, and mourning. Dont tear your clothing in grief, but tear your hearts instead. Return to the Lord your God, for he is merciful and compassionate, slow to get angry and filled with unfailing love. He is eager to relent and not punish. (Joel 2:12-17)
Why not drop everything you have planned for tonight and attend an Ash Wednesday service with your family? Do something special on this day - and take part in the traditions of Lent and encourage your children to do the same. If you do, I promise you will gain a new appreciation for the meaning behind Easter - and your life just might never be the same.
Ash Wednesday Ping!
Papa Benedict XVI!
Praise God and ASH WEDNESDAY Blessings.
Saving.
From the Maronite liturgy:
O God, full of tenderness, you granted to your Church this Lent, time of blessing. Christ, friend of men, you taught us to fast by your fast and your privations. You wanted to make us understand the essential goal of life, the meaning of the world and of its existence, and the grandeur of your love and of your goodness.
Pour out then your mercy upon all men so that they may repent; soften the hearts of your children, and they will come back to you. Weeping with penitence and brokenhearted, they will know you, and they will love you...
Fasting and prayer purify the soul and render the body chaste.
Fasting and prayer shed a marvelous light,the light of Christ, upon those who fast and who pray.
Fasting and prayer raise the spirit, control passions, and the mercy from on high is poured out.
Fasting and prayer chase away evil spirits,and the Holy Spirit settles in the soul created to be the dwelling of God.
And now. O God, grant that we may praise you with pure lips and, through angelic hymns singing from chaste hearts, meditate upon your fasting and follow your voice in order to come to you.
Praise, glory and honor to the Merciful One who waits for sinners to come back and who watches for the return of contrite hearts,
To the Lenient One who rejoices when a lost sheep returns,
To the loving Father who stoops toward the repentant son and who embraces him,
To Him,the Good One to whom come glory and honor today, all the days of our lives, and for ever and ever, AMEN.
This is why a traditional Ash Wednesday service involves receiving a mark of ash on your forehead and hearing the words from Genesis, You were made from dust, and to dust you will return.
The service may also include a prayer from the Psalms, Lord, remind me how brief my time on earth will be. Remind me that my days are numbered, and that my life is fleeing away.
Beautiful post Kaslin... thanks for sharing...
Thank you for that beautiful prayer from the Maronite liturgy!! How did you come by it?
Nice.
Thanks for the ping. Very good read!
It was printed in one of the early editions of the “Reflections of God’s Word” series by Lucien Deiss as a meditation for Ash Wednesday.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.