Yesterday in our service celebrating the second Sunday in Lent, we focused on the theme of Choosing the Path of Most Resistance: Letting Go and the ways our spiritual practice might help us in surrendering control of our lives to a loving and gracious God.
Many Christians around the world observe Lent as a time for letting go---through fasting, or “giving something up.” For some this can be very serious and somber ---motivated by a sense of duty or obligation, or for the purpose of ‘doing the right thing” for oneself, like eating all your vegetables or going to the dentist. For others engaging in Lenten practice can be an attempt at doing penance---trying to make things right by expressing remorse and “paying the price for sin”.
For Western Christians Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of the six weeks of Lent leading up to Easter Sunday. The Eastern Orthodox Church calendar is different: Easter falls on a separate Sunday altogether, and Lent, which lasts for seven weeks, begins on what is often referred to as “Clean Monday”.
In an essay called "Lent and the Consumer Society" from his book Living Orthodoxy in the Modern World Bishop Kallistos Ware writes about the Eastern Orthodox custom of flying kites on Clean Monday:
We are encouraged to associate Lent with fresh air, with the wind blowing on the hills, with the coming of spring. Lent is a time for flying kites--a time for adventure, exploration, fresh initiatives, new hope.... It also has to do with freedom.... Lent is a time when we learn to be free.... As a human person in God's image, I am not truly free unless I have learned how to use my freedom rightly, and this process of learning presupposes obedience, discipline and self-denial. Freedom is not only a gift; it is a task....Lent is concerned, first, with the offering of the world back to God in thanksgiving....
Spend some time now meditating on this image of a kite flying in the fresh air. Be still and close your eyes and imagine yourself as a kite—created and fashioned to fly—light of weight, flexible, yielding --not resisting the wind, not fighting to stay grounded, but embracing the breeze and being swept up into the strong current and lifted high.
What feelings arise for you as you imagine….
Do you feel exhilaration?
Freedom?
Fear?
What might this image of a kite suggest to you about who you are to God?
Jesus asked his friends in Sunday’s reading from Scripture in Mark 8, “What about you…who do you say I am?”
Close your eyes and imagine Jesus asking this of you. Listen to your inner stirrings honestly and without judgment. Respond with whatever emerges in you to Jesus without editing or resisting….and take time to listen….
End your time with a silent prayer, asking God to help you find your way more and more into the freedom that comes from surrendering your life to the One you were created for.
If you are able to spend time outside, take special note of the feel of the breeze on your skin, the air in your nostrils… if you can, go fly a kite!
High Flight
(The Aviator's Poem)
Oh, I have slipped the surly bonds of earth
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
Sunward I've climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
Of sun-split clouds - and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of - wheeled and soared and swung
High in the sunlit silence. Hov'ring there,
I've chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air...
Up, up the long delirious, burning blue,
I've topped the windswept heights with easy grace
Where never lark, or even eagle flew -
And, while with silent lifting mind I've trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
Put out my hand and touched the face of God.
by John Gillespie Magee, RCAF 1922-1941 ~ © This England Books 1996
Monday, March 9, 2009
12th Day of Lent
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