Have you ever had one of those Lents which felt like
you were stuck in traffic in a construction zone? Start. Stop. Start. Stop.
Move a bit forward. No movement. If so, you are not alone! I know for myself
and a few others this Lent has felt this way. It’s not because of a lack of a
plan or resources. Sometimes those plans get sidelined, other times they get
railroaded. The Third Sunday of Lent is a good time to refocus. St. Francis of
Assisi is known for saying, “Let us begin again for up to now we have done very
little.” He made this statement near the end of his life. If he could say it
then surely we can use it as an invitation to step into this Third Week of
Lent.
The very familiar Exodus text of the Ten Commandments
gives us some encouragement to begin again as it reminds us to look at our
relationships. Who am I in relationship with? How is my relationship with God?
Which relationships need healing and forgiveness? How is my relationship with
creation and sabbath time? The Ten Commandments are not punishments to live by
rather they are our guideposts which can lead us into the depth of
relationship. They help us to hear the Lord’s words of everlasting life (Psalm
19) spoken into this season and into our living; inviting us to begin again.
The Season of Lent obviously draws our attention to
the Cross, with its “message of the foolishness of the power of God” (1
Corinthians 1.18). St. Francis spent many of his days caught up with his
attention on the foolishness of the Cross and Passion of Christ. We may not be
able to spend our whole day caught up reflecting on the Cross like St. Francis,
but we can begin again each day to contemplate its wisdom and strength. It may
be as simple as signing ourselves with the cross as we get out of bed, or considering
each street intersection we go through in a day as a reminder of the cross. It
may be as we go for a walk and notice branches in a tree or strewn on the
ground or take note of the streaks in the sky calling us to praise God for gift
of the Cross.
The cross branded onto us in Baptism and Confirmation
is not just a one-time moment. It is a being claimed in Christ which is to then
live in the Paschal Mystery. The temple of our body is signed with Christ not
to be destroyed by the ways of death and destruction of the world, rather to be
transformed into the likeness of who we truly are as children of God. May we be
consumed this week with courage, goodness and zeal for this Lenten journey
whether it is already going well or as we begin again.
By your Cross and Resurrection, Lord Jesus,
you have
set us free.
Photo
Credit: Eberhard Grossgasteiger
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