Ritual Reflections & Musical Musings

By Steve Raml, Director of Liturgy & Music

Lent – Prayer, Fasting & Almsgiving

When you say “Lent” – many people immediately think of ashes on their foreheads, not eating meat on Fridays, or practices like the Stations of the Cross.

These are all good things, but they are not what the Church asks us to focus on during the season of Lent. The three traditions of our Lenten observance are Prayer, Fasting and Almsgiving.

Prayer
Time given to prayer during Lent should draw us closer to the Lord. We might pray especially for the grace to live out our baptismal promises more fully. We might pray for the Elect who will be baptized at the Easter Vigil. We might pray that the St. Elizabeth Seton community will be truly renewed in their baptismal commitment at Easter.

In addition to your individual prayer, there are many communal prayer opportunities at St. Elizabeth Seton, including a daily Evening Prayer at 3:50pm Monday through Friday in our Eucharistic Adoration Chapel. Those who have attended these short prayer services have found them deeply reflective, with a focus on the psalms and the Word of God.

We often consider prayer as “conversing to God”. A conversation is not a monologue. That would be a one-sided conversation. Sure, it is important to bring our concerns and needs to God in prayers of petition, but a conversation includes listening to the other person. Remember, the Voice of God spoke at Jesus’ transfiguration and said, “Listen to Him.” Take time simply to “listen”. Talking and listening: that’s the essence of prayer.

There are many forms of prayer, including formulaic prayers like the Rosary and our familiar prayers of mealtime (“Bless, us O Lord…”) and bedtime (“Now I lay me down to sleep…”). There is also “Centering Prayer”, where you simply sit quietly and truly listen for the Voice of God speaking to you. Start this prayer form simply, staying quiet for 3 minutes, and increase the time each week.

The form of prayer I practice most is called “Lectio Divina”, which is Latin for the Word Divine. It is simply taking a passage from the Bible, perhaps the Gospel for the week, and praying with it. Read it once, read it again, out loud, read it a third time, very slowly, meditating on each phrase or even each word. Again, pausing to listen to what this particular Divine Word is saying to you.

Fasting
Fasting is one of the most ancient practices linked to Lent. Simply put, fasting is the opposite of feasting. It means going without food and/or drink. Not just cutting down, but completely going without. Some may remember the old rule of fasting before receiving Communion: from midnight on, no food or drink (not even water). This practice began in the fourth century and continued until 1957.

The early Church fasted intensely for two days before the celebration of the Easter Vigil. This fast was later extended and became a 40-day period of fasting leading up to Easter. The official Church documents of Vatican II called us to renew the observance of the ancient paschal fast:

“Let the paschal fast be kept sacred. Let it be celebrated everywhere on Good Friday and, where possible, prolonged throughout Holy Saturday, so that the joys of the Sunday of the resurrection may be attained with uplifted and clear mind.” (Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy # 110).

Fasting is an aid to prayer, as the pangs of hunger remind us of our hunger for God. The prophet Isaiah insists that fasting without changing our behavior is not pleasing to God:

“This, rather, is the fasting that I wish: releasing those bound unjustly, untying the thongs of the yoke; setting free the oppressed, breaking every yoke; sharing your bread with the hungry, sheltering the oppressed and the homeless; clothing the naked when you see them, and not turning your back on your own” (Is 58:6-7).

Besides helping us to not take food for granted, fasting can be healthy (for those who are able) because it cleans out our body. More than that, it activates our mind and spirit, directing energy that would have been spent on digestion.

Usually, our bodies spend more energy on digesting than on anything else. If we significantly reduce our food consumption, or as some do, have only water for 24 hours, we have a great store of energy not usually available, which can drive us to thoughts much deeper than usual.

Fasting should be linked to our concern for those who are forced to fast by poverty, those who suffer from the injustices of our economic and political structures. Abstaining from meat traditionally linked us to the poor, who could seldom afford meat for their meals. It can do the same today only if we remember the purpose of abstinence and embrace it as a spiritual link to those whose meals are sparse and simple. Avoiding meat while eating lobster misses the whole point!

By experiencing hunger in our fasting, we become more closely in touch with those who have little to eat, the poor, and that leads to the final Lenten practice: almsgiving.

Almsgiving
It should be obvious at this point that almsgiving, or giving to the poor, can become the fruit of our prayer and fasting.

Especially when we consider that almsgiving, linked to our baptismal commitment, is a sign of our care for those in need and an expression of our gratitude for all that God has given to us. Works of charity and justice are integral elements of the Christian way of life we began when we were baptized.

How you give and what you give is completely between you and God. Several passages in the Bible, both in the Old and New Testaments, remind us that God has a special preference to the poor. In the time of Moses, God’s covenant with Israel was dependent on the way the community treated the poor, the widow and the stranger. (Deuteronomy 16: 11-12, Exodus 22: 21-27, Isaiah 1: 16-17). In Luke’s Gospel, Jesus proclaims that he has been anointed to “bring good news to the poor. (Luke 4: 1-22) And in the Last Judgement scene in Matthew’s Gospel, we are told that we will be judged on how we responded to the hungry, the thirsty, the prisoner and the stranger. (Matthew 25: 31-46)

The Church calls this the “Preferential Option for the Poor”. Our Lenten almsgiving can help alleviate the suffering of those who struggle to survive and reminds us to put their needs ahead of our selfish interests.

St. Augustine wrapped it all up when he wrote about Lent: “Let us, by our prayers, add the wings of piety to our alms deeds and fasting, so that they may fly more readily to God.”

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