To read the texts click on the texts: Jl 2:12-18; 2Cor 5:20-6:2; Mt 6:1-6,16-18
The season of Lent begins
on Ash Wednesday and is derived by counting back 40 days {not including
Sundays} from Easter day. Ash Wednesday is so called because of the imposition
of ashes on the foreheads of the faithful, which serve as a reminder of the call
to repentance and to believe in the good news. The period of Lent is a reminder
of the forty days that Jesus spent in the desert before taking up the mission
he received from his Father at his baptism.
Immediately after the six
antitheses (5:21-48) in the Sermon on the Mount, there follows instructions on
three practices that were common among the Pharisees as a sign of closeness to
God namely almsgiving, prayer and fasting. All three though only a means to
reach God can be made ends in themselves. Almsgiving can be ostentatious,
prayer can be used to show-off and fasting can be used to point to one’s self.
Jesus cautions the listeners about these dangers and challenges them to make
them all internal activities that will lead the way to God rather than being
made ends in themselves. The focus thus is on the motivation with which one
does what one does. If the motivation for doing good is to win the admiration
of human beings, then that action is selfish and self-motivated and so does no
good at all. If the action is done out of a sense of duty or obligation, it
cannot be called pure and is instead diluted. However if one does the action
and accepts that the reward is in the performing of the action itself, such an
action can be salvific. This is the challenge not only of Ash Wednesday, but of
the whole season of Lent, “to give and not to count the cost, to labour and to
look for no reward.”
For us as Christians,
Jesus has simplified matters. There is absolutely no obligation in the
Christian way of life except the obligation to love. When there is love then
all our actions come from our hearts and spontaneously without counting the
cost. Almsgiving becomes generous and spontaneous, prayer becomes union with
God and leads to action and fasting is done in order to show our dependence on
God and not on earthly things.
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