Lent Approacheth…

February 2, 2008

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Lent is on the way. It’s a season I look to with both excitement and dread. Excitement, because it is a very meaningful time of year to me. Dread, because I know that my habit is usually to give something up. I dread that because not only is it a hard thing to do, it’s something I usually end up giving in to at some point or another (I dread the guilt, in other words!).

And I must confess that I have a difficult time understanding the traditions behind Lent, as well – things like Mardi Gras and Fat/Shrove Tuesday, the idea that fasting only takes place on the weekdays, not eating meat and so on. These are things I’ve done a little research into, and I understand the basic idea and all… I just don’t think it makes the season any more meaningful to me. It’s probably a result of the tradition I grew up in, in which folks talked about things like Lent and Advent in the same hushed tones of voice that they used to talk about satanic rituals and cult gatherings.

Things have changed for me (fortunately). But while I understand Lent now and the penitence that many observe, I still confess to some ignorance of all the traditions surrounding it.

I remember in high school when some older friends of mine decided to “get saved” and join the church. At a lunch after worship on the Sunday they were baptized, they told us how they’d spent their Saturday night: They’d gone out drinking, smoking, having sex, and all kinds of other crazy things (or at least they told us they did, and judging from how I’d seen them act at other times, I didn’t find it hard to believe). Our youth leader was shocked and seemed sad. I remember simply being confused. At the time, it didn’t make sense. Now it does make sense, I’m sorry to say – too much sense.

This year, I’ve decided to “add on” instead of taking away. I’m going to get up on the weekdays and go over to the church early for prayer and devotion. I’ll do it at a time that will allow others to join me before they head to work or other tasks, and I hope some others will join me. This is something I don’t do regularly enough, I admit. I don’t know if it will be meaningful or not, but I certainly know it’ll do me more good than giving up chocolate.

But that’s me. If you’re reading this, how do YOU plan to observe Lent this year? Are you used to observing it at all? How does your church observe Lent?


Prayer for MLK Worship

January 28, 2008

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A couple of weeks ago, Chuck Warnock  from Chatham Baptist put up a post about a service his church was doing on MLK day, bringing together the races in a service in honor of the legacy of Dr. King.  While I’ve been at Kenbridge, we’ve celebrated MLK day in some way during the worship service on that Sunday, but I must admit I’m intrigued and inspired by the idea of having a community service on that day…

But in the meantime, I was unable to find an appropriate responsive prayer for our Sunday service, so I wrote one.

“We Have a Dream”
A prayer of confession in observance of
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
January 20, 2008

We have a dream, O Lord.
We share a holy dream:
We dream of a world united in love,
Where boundaries are broken down.
We dream of a world where justice is done,
Where all are treated as friends.
We dream of a world where God is the King,
Where all can share in his glory.
We dream of a world where evil is banished,
Where war and death are no more.

And while we dream, we confess O Lord
That we don’t always work to see it come true;
That sometimes, in spite of ourselves, we even work against it.
By our hatred, narrow-mindedness and pride,
Our partiality toward those of our own race,
Religion, class, political party;
Yes, Lord, even prejudice against our own brothers and sisters in Christ
Whose beliefs are different from our own.
These are born of nothing more than fear, O God.
Fear of something different from ourselves;
Fear that we might end up loving
what we once thought was unlovable.
We confess our failure to dream, O Lord.
Help us to dream again.

Help us to dream your dream, O Lord.
Help us to live the dream,
So when we wake from this darkened life,
We’ll find the dream come true.