There is no island, no continent, no city or nation, no distant corner of the globe, where the proclamation of Lenten Fast is not listened to. Armies on the march and travelers on the road, sailors as well as merchants, all alike hear the announcement and receive it with joy. Let no one then separate himself from the number of those fasting, in which every race of humankind, every period of life, every class of society is included.
So said Saint Basil the Great (330-379) preaching about the arrival of Lent in the 4th century. The triumphalist universality of Basil's account obviously no longer describes our contemporary reality in our more globalized and hence more multi-culturally conscious world. It barely even describes what is left of Lent in what remains of the Christian world. But Lent (or, at least, Ash Wednesday) remains one of the most recognized and observed occasions in the Christian calendar, even in our supposedly secularized society.
While Lent (or, at least Ash Wednesday) remains immensely popular, the question remains, why Lent? There are many pious practices associated with Lent - notably fasting, prayer, and acts of charity. These, of course, are meant as means to an end. Lent and its traditional practices are our means of deepening our relationship with God and consciously and deliberately re-orienting all aspects of our lives accordingly. Our Lenten fasting, our increased prayer, our acts of individual and collective charity all express God's grace at work with in us and open us to ever more grace, to the fullness of life that is our destiny, as we seek through our actions here and now to become the persons we shall be for all eternity.
Lent has its origins in the final preparation of catechumens for baptism and membership in the Church and of penitents for reconciliation with God and the Church. Even prior to the modern 20th-century restoration of the catechumenate, the Lenten liturgy reflected both of these themes, as it continues to do. During Lent, we identify with the catechumens in their journey of conversion and express it in our own individual and communal journey of reconciliation with God and with one another.
Lent, as Pope Leo has written in his first lenten message, "is a time in which the Church, guided by a sense of maternal care, invites us to place the mystery of God back in the center of our lives, in order to find renewal in our faith and keep our hearts from being consumed by the anxieties and distractions of daily life. "
We live in a therapeutic age which prizes comfort and feeling good about ourselves. Yet surprisingly Ash Wednesday - with its sobering message of the reality of human limits and its solemn challenge to repent - somehow still cuts through the poisonous political platitudes and psychobabble of our self-affirmational age to speak spiritual truth against the powerful lies that envelope us.
Every Lent, the Church invites us to break our routine and do something we usually seem somewhat reluctant to do – to take an honest and critical look at ourselves - at where we are, where we are going, where we would like to be going, and how we hope to get there. Lent, as Pope Leo has suggested, "means allowing ourselves to be challenged by reality and recognizing what truly guides our desires — both within our ecclesial communities and as regards humanity’s thirst for justice and reconciliation."





