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Today, Ash Wednesday, with faith and hope and trusting in God, we set out on our Lenten pilgrimage, a forty-day journey that we take with Jesus as we walk with him towards Holy Week and Easter, through darkness into light. St Benedict writes in the Rule that a monk’s life should be a permanent Lent, by which he meant that we should always be walking with Jesus on the Way of the Cross, not as a penance, but as a way of preparing for the joy of Easter with our hearts fully syntonised to God. I really like Lent. I’ve always found it the most exciting and rewarding of the Christian seasons, and it definitely has the best readings!
Our Gospel for today comes from the Sermon on the Mount, (Mt 6: 1-6, 16-18), in which Jesus talks to his disciples about almsgiving, prayer and fasting, three practices that are closely related and come down to us from Old Testament times. Essentially, he is asking his disciples, us in reality today, to do things quietly and in an unostentatious way. There is no need for others to see what we are doing. Any act of kindness, any extra prayer, any form of fasting, however small or great, should be between God and ourselves. So discrete should we be, that not even our left hand should know what our right hand is doing. To some extent, this goes against human nature. We tend to show off and love to show others how good we are. You could say we suffer from a certain lack of humility and, therefore, integrity. It is sufficient that God sees what we do. Perhaps, God will reward us, but we don’t do things in order to be rewarded. God doesn’t play games like these. So, this Lent, whatever it is that we have decided to give up or take on, let’s keep it to ourselves and not shout about it from the rooftop, No one need know.
Let me take this opportunity to wish you all a very happy and holy Lent, a Lent filled with the gifts of the Spirit and the joy of Easter. God bless you.
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