My Sacristy Wall

Resourcing Kentucky's new monastic, Anglo-Catholic renewal.

Think of it as ecclesiastical guerrilla warfare.

With nice vestments and tea at 4.

"The Anglican Communion has no peculiar thought, practice, creed or confession of its own. It has only the Catholic Faith of the ancient Catholic Church, as preserved in the Catholic Creeds and maintained in the Catholic and Apostolic constitution of Christ's Church from the beginning."

- Geoffrey Fisher, 99th Archbishop of Canterbury

Polycarp

Bishop Polycarp of Smyrna, martyred for Christ in 156

For today's commemoration, visit "Telling Stories That Matter," from Joshua Hearne, the Baptist Bard.

Read more on the Christian Year.

Thinking

"O happy fault! If we weren't sinners and didn't need pardon more than bread, we'd have no way of knowing how deep God's love is."
- Louis Evely

"Avoid, like the plague, a clergyman who is also a businessman."
- St. Jerome

"Slander is worse than cannibalism."
- St. John Chrysostom

"Tradition is the living faith of the dead. Traditionalism is the dead faith of the living."
- Jaroslav Pelikan

"The Jesus of Suburbia is a lie."
- Green Day

"It's true romance is dead
I shot it in the chest and in the head"

- Fall Out Boy

"Don't just adore the Eucharist, enact it."
- William Cavanaugh

"If you can be talked out of your faith, you probably should be."
- Roger Ward

"Don't ever deny someone the luxury of being human or broken. That is not a luxury you yourself can afford to lose."
- Sarah Cunningham

"It is better that the United States be liquidated than that she survive by war."
- Dorothy Day

"Wherever the Psalter is abandoned, an incomparable treasure vanishes from the Christian Church. With its recovery will come unexpected power."
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Me!

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Renovaré
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Common Worship: Services and Prayers for the Church of England
Universalis: Liturgy of the Hours Online
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Christian Spirituality Bibliography

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Maria Lectrix: Church Fathers on Mp3
The Christian Classics Ethereal Library
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Cavanaugh Internet Archive
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Tuesday, February 05, 2008
Beginning Great Lent
This is my standard introduction to the practices of the Christian season of Lent.

I realize that not all of my wonderful readers are familiar with the purpose and practice of the Lenten season. Stay with me as I indulge myself (and perhaps you) in a little bit of history and theology.

Where it Came From

In the earliest Christian centuries, once the Christian mission moved past Palestine and the "god-fearing" Gentiles (those familiar with and disposed toward the story of Israel's god, like Cornelius in Acts 10) and into the wider Roman world, it became necessary to catechize potential converts - to be intentional about teaching them the story of Israel's god, his people, his world, and his Christ, from beginning to end. Catechesis was a time of ethical reformation, as members of the church discipled these soon-to-be Christians in the way of God's New Community.

Much of the theological instruction for this one to three year period was put into the period of 40 days before the Great Vigil of Easter. The forty days brings echoes of Moses conversing with God on Sinai before receiving the Ten Commandments, the forty years of temptation in the wilderness that refined Israel, and the forty days when Jesus entered the wilderness for his communion with God and to prepare for his own testing. Forty days is a time of refining and of being with the Lord.

At the season of Lent, Christian converts receive intensive theological education, accompanied by prayers, confession and exorcisms - it is indeed an intense time of being with the Lord. The rest of the Church also walks through this time of penitence and learning and self-examination.

Walking with Jesus

It also has a place in the overall narrative of Jesus' life: At Epiphany, we commemorated his appearance to his people, and realized that he is the light that scatters our darkness. At his baptism, he was revealed to be the Son of God, bearing divine favor for the people. At the reception of John's baptism, he identified himself with the faithful remnant of Israel, and began to reconstitute the nation in terms of loyalty to himself by his calling of the Twelve; now enter the story of the last days of his ministry, when he begin to orient himself and his disciples to his vocation of suffering and death for the sake of the people. The story has taken a dark turn, and we join the Master as he sets his face resolutely toward Jerusalem. In solidarity with him, we begin the time of sorrowing for our sins and his suffering, walking into the darkness of our broken humanity in the hope of Easter's light.

So the matter of Lenten disciplines or practices is this: what can I do to set my own face toward Jerusalem? What in my personality and my life with the Church in the world needs to be put to death, and what does God wish to be raised up? I think we find the answers to these questions by putting ourselves in an intentional posture of listening: making a quiet space in our routines to hear from the Lord.

This is not meant for Herculean efforts of spiritual zeal - like boot camp for Jesus - but for a time of greater intentionality. We learn to be quiet and make space, preparing for the conviction of sin, and to offer our brokenness for his healing, so that when we do speak and act, we will do so as a grateful and repentant response to the Trinitarian God who leads us into truth.

We rededicate ourselves in practical ways to prayer, to seeking and listening to the counsel of our brothers and sisters, and in learning more deeply the Way of Life. In this practice-able, regular actions - these ways of making space - we invite the Lord to purge our personalities of the dross of the old nature, and to refine us more and more as part of the new creation. Repentance, it must be remembered, is a change of attitude, a new way of seeing that sends us walking in a different direction. Sometimes the turning is slight, and sometimes it's one hundred and eighty degrees. Our goal is not a particular spiritual experience or to start or stop a particular habit necessarily, but to be with the Lord and offer to him our readiness to turn in unexpected directions, to listen to words we would not have anticipated, and answer yes to him in ways we would not have imagined.

The time of Great Lent is upon us. May it be a holy one as we walk into the dark places of ourselves and discover that the Lord Himself leads us into the stillness of our solitary fears, to sit with us, to heal us, and to absorb all of our darkness into the Darkness of his Cross and the Light of Easter Dawn.

So how do we make this concrete?

Saying the office is a way of making space in our day that will sanctify the rest of it, and letting the Scriptures teach us how to offer our hearts to the Lord.

Centering prayer enables us to quiet ourselves in a deep, purposeful way, to stop the noise and stop the thinking and just stop … and wait for the Spirit of the Lord to come and do what it will. It's about giving him space to do the deep works he needs to do, but doesn't really need to tell us about.

Attending to the holy mysteries, and receiving the mystical body of Christ into oneself - does that need explanation? Salvation, after all, isn't only or even mostly in our heads. Salvation is performed, and salvation must be eaten.

Peace and blessing be upon you as you begin the journey of Lent in God's Church.

posted by Kyle @ 8:18 PM   3 comments links to this post

3 Comments:

At 2/06/2008 5:03 AM, Blogger SaintSimon said...

Liturgy and the church calender are poor masters but great servants. When it is described as in your post, lent is a great servant (although you will not be surprised to know that I would quibble about some points). I now feel more equipped to respond to people that say "what are you giving up for lent?". Thank you.

 
At 2/06/2008 6:04 AM, Blogger Kyle said...

You guard your freedom in Christ jealously, and that's commendable - but don't let it become paranoia.

Peace, Simon.

 
At 2/08/2008 1:50 AM, Anonymous Josh said...

Can you give up Lent for Lent?

 

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About Me


Kyle Potter, MTh (Oxon)
Catechist for Adult Formation,
Saint Patrick's Church
Missioner to Georgetown, Kentucky
Anglican Mission in the Americas
E-mail me

Library Technician for
Research Assistance & Cataloging
Department Liaison for Religion, Philosophy, Sociology & Theatre
Instructor of Christian Theology
Ensor LRC, Georgetown College

Who Is This Guy?

I am the Vine. You are the branches.

"The Church claims to be the most comprehensive human society there is - the new human race in embryo. And it claims this because of its belief that it is established not by any human process grounded in and limited by events, cultures and so on, but by God's activity."
- Rowan Williams

More About Me

"Vindicated"?
My Religious Journey
Storytime

Comments that suck will be deleted

Controversial Posts

Casting Down Strongholds: Deconstructing Christian Clichés
Why "Liberal" Really is a Dirty Word
Heretics: Watch Your Damned Language
Five Things I Believe and Trust
Five Things I Reject
Christology
What is Evangelical Christianity?
Does "Evangelical" Matter?
On Evangelical Grammar
On Purgatory: Even the Mercy of the Lord Burns

Christ and Culture

On Criticizing Religion
The Post-Modern Morass
Are We Idealistic?
More on Being Post-Modern
Relevant?


england

Ecclesiology:
Living in God's New Community

Index, with descriptions
On The Church
God's Model T?
Superpowers: On the Holy Spirit in the Community
On the Eucharistic Life
"...and Occasionally Prophecy": Thoughts on Authority
On the Day of Ashes: Community is Hard
The Great Vigil: Signs of Life
Schism
Risking Love
Why it Hurts
A Matter of Trust
Authority Issues
Trust and Obedience
The Communion of Saints
Understanding Our Community
On "Having Church"
On Being a Diaspora Christian
Homosexuality and Evangelical Churches
Unity and Exclusion
Excommunication and Redemption
Ecumenism
The Minimum
Community and Growth
Church and Witness

Rublev Trinity

The Holy Trinity: Participating in God

On the Sacraments

Baptism: An Interactive Poll
Baptism: Is Repetition a Good Thing?
A Eucharistic Index
"Evangelicals and Catholics Together"?

The Baptism of Our Lord

Christianity as Bodily Practices:
Doing the Jesus Thing

On Spiritual Disciplines
"But Will it Work for Me?"
On Worship
On Prayer
The Liturgy of the Hours: An Introduction
Liturgy of the Hours: Your Practices
Liturgy of the Hours: My Take
In Defense of Praise Choruses
The Sign of the Cross
On Being a Good Christian
The Sacrifice of Praise
Remaining in Christ
Why I Am Not a Calvinist
Purgation: 5 Things I Would Change About American Christianity

Harrowing of Hell

Practice Resurrection

Darkness and Light:
Seasons of the Christian Year

The Advent Hope
Advent: Waiting on the Lord
Epiphany
Entering Lent
On Lent: Understanding the Tradition
Lenten Practices
The Day of Ashes
Safe to Die
Everything You Know is Incorrect
Maundy Thursday
Holy Saturday: Mourning, Waiting
The Great Vigil: "How Blessed is This Night"
The Great Vigil: Signs of Life
Eastertide: Meet Me On This Road
Pentecost

The Twelve Apostles

Ancient Christianity:
Engaging the Fathers

The Didache
Polycarp of Smyrna
Ignatius of Antioch, I
Ignatius of Antioch, II
Clement of Rome
Diognetus, I
Diognetus, II
Taking Back the Fathers
Justin Martyr
Antony of the Desert
Athanasius of Alexandria, I
Athanasius of Alexandria, II
Apostolic Succession
The Vincentian Canon

idols

Patriotism:
Before the Altar of Caesar

The Glories of War
World War One: Religious Support
World War One: "I Am Not a Christian"
Porter Memorial and the Powers That Be
"The Church of Jesus Christ does not have the luxury of patriotism"
"Every Knee Shall Bow: Anschließ den Reichskirchen"
Christians and the State
Closure
New Comments Go Here
Desecration
Howl
Worshippers of Mars

Considering Ministry

My +3 Apostolic Succession Beats Your Spell of Arius
A Conversation That Did Not, and Would Not, Happen
Qualifications of the Presbyterate
The Professional Ministry
Is Itinerant Ministry Valid?
Validation
Vocation: I Am Really Awfully Right and Reverend

Rembrandt, Return of the Prodigal

Singleness and Celibacy

The Problem with Singles Ministry
A Holy Celibacy: More Than Absence
Celibacy as "Space for God"
Obstacles to a Theology of Celibacy
Emo Meme

Recent Posts

Lenten Observances
Still Thinking About the Church
Ta Da!
Boring!
It always surprises me
Stuff
Marriage and Hypocrisy
Today
Taking the Mass out of Christmas
Books

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