When
Christ began His public ministry of announcing the Kingdom, His
ministry of evangelization, He immediately journeyed into the desert
for 40 days, to fast and pray (Matthew 4:1-11; Mark 1:12-13; Luke
4:1-13). By so doing, He gave us an example of how we, too, must
prepare ourselves for the challenge of the new evangelization, of
living the Gospel day by day, of meeting the "high standard of ordinary
Christian living" (Pope John Paul II). Because prayer and fasting are
essential to our life in Christ, our Lord gives us an annual time of
strong grace in the Church, Lent. During the 40 days of our Lenten
journey with Him into the desert, He purifies us of disordered
thoughts, desires and actions, so that our love of God and neighbor may
be more like His, may be more pure.
Traditional
Lenten penance consists of prayer, fasting and almsgiving. Our Lenten
penance addresses the entirety of our life, so that, with the help of
God’s grace, we may become more like Christ in everything we think and
say and do.
Prayer
Through
our Lenten prayer, we deepen our relationship with God. Christ leads
us to make prayer once again the foundation and inspiration of our
daily living. If we are to be Christ’s co-workers in announcing the
Gospel, then we, like Christ, must be in daily communication with God
the Father. We must pray daily and throughout the day.
Through
our Lenten prayer, we make Sunday Mass and daily Mass, if possible, the
center of our lives and the source from which our daily prayer and
devotional life flow. Our sincere Lenten observance makes us attentive
to all of our prayers and devotions, so that they really are a turning
of our minds and hearts to God the Father.
Fasting
In
the desert of Lent, we are able to look at our stewardship of the
material goods which God has given to us for the sake of the Kingdom,
for the sake of giving Him glory by serving our brothers and sisters in
sacrificial love. In the desert, we come to understand that no material
object brings us lasting happiness. Only day-to-day love of God and
service of God brings us lasting joy and peace, a joy and peace that no
trial or test, no matter how great, can take away.
By
our abstinence and fasting from the use of certain foods, we are given
grace to see how our use of all God’s manifold gifts may serve better
the good of all. Fasting helps us to clarify our vision, our thinking,
which can be clouded or confused by the completely secularized culture
in which we live.
Pope
Benedict XVI, in his Message for Lent 2006, reminds us that our good
and the good of the world is found in Christ alone, in His victory over
evil. Fasting draws us closer to Christ in making reparation for our
sins and the sins of the world, and in seeking the good of every
brother and sister, without boundary or exception.
In
a particular way, our more frequent access to the Sacrament of Penance
during Lent helps us to unite our hearts to the Pierced Heart of Jesus,
seeking in Him — in the outpouring of His Holy Spirit into our souls —
the victory over evil in our lives and in our world. It is not by
accident that the sacrament by which our sins are forgiven is called
Penance. Only a heart that has been opened and purified through prayer
and fasting can be filled with the mercy and love of God, flowing from
the Heart of Jesus.
Almsgiving
Finally,
almsgiving leads us to a purer relationship with one another. In a
striking way, Pope Benedict XVI, in his Message for Lent 2006, urges us
to imitate the mercy of God, the Divine Mercy, which overcomes all evil
in our personal lives and in our world. The mercy of God, incarnate in
Jesus Christ, overcomes in us every tendency to deny respect to a
brother or sister, or to a class of brothers and sisters.
Once
again, our secularized culture teaches us that our goods are "ours." In
truth, they are God’s gift to us for the service of Him and one
another. The Lenten penance of almsgiving leads us to place ourselves
and our goods more at the service of our brothers and sisters who are
in need. The theme which Pope Benedict XVI chose for his Lenten message
reminds us that almsgiving, in a pre-eminent way, expresses our oneness
with Christ in looking upon our brothers and sisters and being moved
with pity.
Conclusion
May
the observance of the holy season of Lent lead you closer to our Lord
Jesus Christ and strengthen your witness to Him in your daily
living. With Pope Benedict XVI, I confide our observance of Lenten
penance in the archdiocese to the intercession of the Blessed Virgin
Mary, under her title of Our Lady of Guadalupe. When our Blessed Mother
visited our continent in 1531, she declared the sole intention of her
appearances, namely, to lead us to God’s merciful love, incarnate in
her Divine Son. May Our Lady of Guadalupe lead us to her Son, so that,
through the days of Lent we may faithfully accompany Him in the desert
of prayer, fasting and almsgiving. May she lead us to her Son, so that,
with Him, we may carry out our mission of the new evangelization.