果冻视频

Hilary K. Davis

10 Reasons Why Lent Is the Best Time of the Year

a February wall calendar with days crossed out

Today, millions of Christians gathered in churches around the world to get on their knees and have their forehead marked with an ashy cross as they heard either the words, 鈥淩epent, and believe the gospel!鈥 or 鈥淩emember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.鈥 

Ash Wednesday commences a 46-day (40 days excluding Sundays) period of fasting known as Lent in preparation for Easter that has been celebrated since the days of the early church (with recorded discussions of Lent as early as the third century; the Ash Wednesday tradition began in the eighth century). Those who participate in Lent may choose to give up a worldly pleasure (like sweets or Netflix) for 40 days and give more to the poor, or add in a spiritual discipline, practicing the divine exchange of sin for grace.

In the Protestant tradition in which I grew up we did not practice Lent (though many Protestant denominations do), but as an adult I have come to love Lent as my favorite season of the church calendar. Here are 10 reasons why.

1. I love that Hallmark just cannot find a way to make money off of Ash Wednesday, Maundy Thursday, or even Good Friday.

2. Lent is the time of year when people who get labeled as melancholics and the depressed get to shine. (If you鈥檝e read any of the Old Testament prophets, by the way, they definitely fit in this category.) Lent is a celebration of mortality, a time for everybody to think about what 鈥済lass half-empty鈥 folks already think about all the time鈥攖hings like, 鈥淲e are all going to die. People should think about that more!鈥

3. The eighteenth-century German writer Johann Goethe allegedly wrote that 鈥渉e who cannot draw on 3,000 years is living hand to mouth.鈥 As Christians, grafted into God鈥檚 family by Jesus, we share in the history of the Israelites, which goes back over 4,000 years (with father Abraham having lived roughly around 2000 BCE). Lent is a time for remembering where we come from as a sacred people group: forty days on an ark through a (seemingly nonsensical) flood; forty days on a thunderstorming mountaintop to receive the Law of God, going holy-crazy till our face shines like the sun; forty days searching out the Promised Land and bringing back gargantuan fruit as a sign; forty days listening for the still small whispering voice of a God who roars; forty days to play recalcitrant, runaway prophet, moping under a vine while the people actually do repent; forty days to lie on our side with the weight of our nation鈥檚 sin holding us down when it doesn鈥檛 repent; forty days alone to face down the devil, all the while becoming very hungry; forty days to walk the earth with a strange, transmogrified body before ascending to heaven to sit down at God鈥檚 right hand. Forty days to remember that what comes after all the waiting is heaven.

4. Well, okay, we鈥檙e not to the risen Christ yet. Instead, we get to remember him in all the modes of living we don鈥檛 like: being tempted, misunderstood, and, ultimately, betrayed and rejected. I鈥檓 thankful for Jesus鈥 ultimate sacrifice . . . but really I鈥檓 also so thankful to Jesus for all the years he lived here, being ordinary like us, putting up with all our pettiness, sifting through the bowels of reality, and somehow not sinning in his assessment of the human lot.

5. 鈥淩emember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.鈥 These words are spoken to sober, to stir repentance at the imposition of the ashes. I always think, 鈥淲hat a relief鈥濃攁 relief to give up trying to be . . . impressive. Repentance means becoming realistic about who we are.

Like most Millennials, I love taking personality tests, analyzing my spiritual gifts, finding my strengths, and reckoning the hue of my [insert random-kitschy-noun here鈥攑arachute?], but Lent reminds us of simple truths, and it鈥檚 the simplest we need the most reminders for: I鈥檓 a creature that will decompose, but I get to breathe and enjoy life with other creatures. I鈥檓 a child of God who will last forever. I鈥檓 a sinner saved by grace, and my Savior made himself into quite the mess for me with all those bloody marks still showing up there.

6. It鈥檚 really awesome to look around and see a bunch of other people with smudgy black crosses on their foreheads. On the campus where I minister, with its dense population, you get a lot of second-takes from people without crosses, and a sense of silent solidarity with people who are also choosing to display their repentance. A spiritual cat is out of the bag (albeit a sad lil鈥 guy). Those ashy crosses dotting faces are beautiful. Other forms of evangelism are of course needed, but I find this humble 鈥渟ign and symbol鈥 a refreshing alternative to a 鈥渨inning鈥 Christianity. That forehead smudge proclaims that we are all, in fact, losers鈥攊f it weren鈥檛 for the cross. 

7. I find the spiritual air on earth during Lent to be particularly invigorating. I don鈥檛 think I鈥檓 making it up or that I am especially mystical in this regard. In these forty days, millions of people are fasting to make room for Jesus. The global Church is taking a collective deep breath, making room in its lungs for the long-haul. I鈥檓 so grateful to know that Christians worldwide are in it to lose it right now. As we plant our face to the ground in repentance, let鈥檚 imagine a chain of brothers and sisters also on their faces, clasping hands and reaching around the globe: we the Church are repenting together.

8. So many people suffer. Even in church, we still largely celebrate the shiny sides of people鈥攖heir gifts, their passions, their victories and answered prayers. We all want to live bright lives, and Holy Spirit makes us light up all right. But we all suffer, many of us horribly so, much of the time. We have chronic fatigue syndrome that makes it almost impossible for us to be productive. We鈥檝e lost a child to suicide and we don鈥檛 know why we鈥檙e still living. Our second husband has left us and, while we know God loves us, we often feel that there is no love for us left in the world. These sufferings are so real. They are part of being united with Christ.

Lent is a time to hear those people, to see the image of the Lord in what is, yet, not. I will never forget one Good Friday service I attended, in which seven people shared stories of how the seven last phrases of Christ (respectively) had applied to their lives. The vulnerability they modeled by exposing their losses, rejections, and sad, quiet attempts to love God when it鈥檚 hard stunned me and changed me, for good. Now is the time to air our stories.

9. Indulging can be exhausting. It鈥檚 great to have an 鈥渆xcuse鈥 to break up with cravings. To look at what I want, and then, instead of scheming about how to get it or praying about why I don鈥檛 have it yet, to do something else. Every year when Ash Wednesday comes around I think back to past Lents鈥攖o what I 鈥済ave up鈥 and what God gave me. It鈥檚 an anniversary of transforming love, a grace: something palpable that God has set in place to remind us he鈥檚 there.

10. I like a good challenge. Lent is God throwing us a challenge, and it鈥檚 a really good one. Of course we鈥檒l fail at our resolutions or want to give up. But that鈥檚 the whole point of the challenge: Repent, and believe the gospel!


 

Blog Categories

Hilary Davis is multivocational, loving her work as a part-time staff member with 果冻视频's Native Ministries while also observing the ways of God as a student at Gordon-Conwell Seminary in Hamilton, MA. She also enjoys teaching people how to write as a freelance editor/writing coach. Besides fasting during Lent, her favorite activities include long nature walks and making music with her seminary-based band, the Feminarians. 

Close menu