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Mission Monthly |
...Meditate on These Things.
Phillipians 4.8 "Let us stress once more that the purpose of Lent is not to force on us a few formal obligations, but to ‘soften’ our heart so that it may open itself to the realities of the spirit, to experience the hidden ‘thirst and hunger’ for communion with God."Fr. Alexander Schmemann - Great Lent
To my beloved family in Christ, “Christ is Risen!”
The joy of Pascha is upon us and by the grace of God our “thirst” has
been quenched and our “hunger” satisfied.
The “bright sadness” of our lives, hopefully, has once again entered
into our Lord’s supreme victory over our greatest enemies, the devil and
death. The darkness of the
devil’s deception is annihilated in the brilliance of God’s glory, once and
for all filling all creation with the profound silence of the empty tomb!
“Nothing has been said and everything has been said,” remarked one
theologian, as we now stand, like Israel of old having passed through the Red
Sea, on the far shores of freedom watching the waves of God’s glory crash in
upon Pharaoh’s charioteers of sin, injustice and oppression.
Beloved, Christ is risen and we are free. Like Israel of old, having spent forty years in the desert of
purification, our forty days of lent have brought us to the edge of the heavenly
Canaan, yearning to hear the words of our Lord spoken to the penitent thief,
“Today you will be with me in paradise!” Beloved, Christ is risen and the gates of paradise are once
again open that the faithful may enter. Oh,
that this great salvation would be our one and only desire!
Sadly, like Israel of old we are a stubborn and ungrateful people,
grumbling at every inconvenience, complaining at every hardship, doubting at
every trial, rushing for every blessing, resisting at every sacrifice, running
to every passion, fearing the ways of God, building the idols of the mind.
Today, however, is not the day to dwell on the work that still remains.
“You will always have the poor with you,” as we will always have the
work of repentance and salvation. Today
is the day that we measure the work that has, by the grace of God, been
accomplished. Not in terms of production or quantity or the accomplishment
of “formal obligations,” but in terms of the full measure of satisfaction
that only comes to a heart open and soft from a “thirsting” and
“hungering” after righteousness. Our
communion with God begins again and again by submitting to His Word and work
(liturgy) in obedience, humility and love.
It begins in baptism and the “putting on” of Christ, by dying with
Him and thereby rising with Him. It
begins by living the Resurrection of Christ each and every moment, each and
every day. It begins in the word of
the Cross, “It is finished,” by dying to ourselves in Christ and to the
world of sin and death, that our spiritual blood shed in war with the devil may
add to the rising rivers of freedom leading all creation back to its Creator and
the harbor of paradise.
“Arduous” was a word recently used by a newcomer to Orthodoxy
describing the rigors of Holy Lent. Beloved,
Israel of old was tempted to return to the slavery of Egypt.
How much more must we be willing to fight to keep the great gift of
freedom received in the death and Resurrection of our Lord.
Christ is risen and we are free! Let
us live our freedom not to the glories of the world or of ourselves but to the
Glory of God. Let us be faithful to
our “obligations,” by wielding the weapons of virtue, prayer and fasting,
only heightened during the days of lent, for the whole of our lives, disciplined
not by the force of rule but rather by the force of love!
Let us soften our hearts, opening them to the work of the Holy Spirit
that our “hidden ‘thirst and hunger’ for communion with God” may be more
deeply revealed. As lights to the
world let us boldly proclaim by word and by deed, with angels and before man,
“Christ is risen!”