Those of you who have followed my off-and-on-again blogging
for a while will remember that for several consecutive years, I did my own
separate Lenten blog. Each day I would read the
daily readings assigned by the church, reflect upon them, and write a blog
entry about what they stirred in me.
I stopped doing that blog a few years ago just because it
felt like it was time. The joy and spontaneity
had gone out of it and it felt like drudgery or even worse, like a self-serving
exercise. So I turned my attention to
other Lenten disciplines.
This year, I committed to myself that I would do a daily
Lenten devotion. The first few days of
Lent I used some printed materials I had picked up at the Catholic Women’s
Conference in February, but then I
stumbled into some wonderful resources at the Creighton University Online
Ministries website. (http://onlineministries.creighton.edu/CollaborativeMinistry/Lent/index.html) They have a
section called Praying Lent that leads one through a daily devotion built on
the assigned reading for the day, and I have found those devotions very
good. The reflection each day is written
by a different member of the Creighton University faculty or staff and I have
found them quite effective and thought provoking.
There is also a link to a Lenten Online Retreat. I’m sure to some that would seem like a
bizarre mixing of concepts – isn’t a retreat where you go to get away from
online stuff? But I have found it
extremely moving. And in all honestly, I
have probably given it only about 35% of the effort it deserves. But even at that, it has made a difference
for me. It gives you something to think
about and then tells you to try to hold that concept in your mind and heart and
focus on it in the in-between-times of your day. It talks a lot about letting these concepts
work in the background as your conscious effort is going into the regular
activities of life. And while I feel
like I’m only having so-so success at doing that, I can still feel the
benefits.
And today, after reading the daily devotion and the thought
starters for the Third Week of Lent, for the first time in a long time, I felt
motivated to blog about my journey. I
don’t succeed at staying focused on Lent and all it means every single
day. I don’t even succeed at keeping my
Lenten discipline every single day, though I try and I don’t miss too many
days. But even with my failings, I feel
God reaching out to me, reassuring me that he is always there, hearing the
cries of my heart and filling my life with so much love and plenty that I am
awed and humbled. For me, this year, God’s
messages are pretty strongly about hands-on how to live my life, how to walk
the talk of my faith, how to see Jesus in the tangible, real-world needs of
those around me. I think that message
varies based on who we are, where we are, and what we need. But in Lent 2014, for me, that is the message
I’m getting. So I just rededicate myself to trying to look for Jesus in those
around me and to trying, in my own weak, humble way, to do what he would have me
do.
2 comments:
Add daily dark chocolate Susan!
Beautifully written, Susan!
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