Is Lent Biblically Endorsed?
John Clardy
Matthew 6:16-18
16 Moreover when ye fast, be not, as the hypocrites, of a sad countenance: for they disfigure their faces, that they may appear unto men to fast. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward.
17 But thou, when thou fastest, anoint thine head, and wash thy face;
18 That thou appear not unto men to fast, but unto thy Father which is in secret: and thy Father, which seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly.
I am not trying to degrade anyone or dismiss anyone’s dedication or devotion, and I would not wish to offend anyone in regards to their acts of religious service or sacrifice, but at the same time I would ask the question – “Is Lent a Biblically endorsed ordinances of the Christian Church corporately?”
I do believe that there are certain ordinances such as communion, corporate worship, baptism, to mention a few are Biblically endorsed, even commanded. However, whereas acts of fasting and sacrifice can apply at times to congregations, they are more intended as personal, unorganized and even random acts of devotion of the individual congregants. And while there are corporate times of prayer, sacrifice, fasting and giving, they are judged by their private motives, not by public participation.
Jesus said, “When you (personal pronoun) fast, when you give, when you pray, do it in secret, do it in an manner that does not draw attention to you, so that your Father who sees in secret will reward you openly. (See Matthew 6:1-8, 16-18).
Whoever determined that a sad countenance and a sour spirit was the proper way to reverence God? Who is it that has the authority to determine that only those things that are done out of dread and suffering are the only way to honor what God did by sending His Son to take our place?
What are we doing when we indulge in sin because we are foreseeing a period of time when we are going to deprive ourselves from those activities? What are we doing when we punish ourselves because of our sins? Are we not making the sacrifice of Christ of no effect? Have we forgotten that it is by grace and grace only that we are saved? We can never earn salvation! It is a gift that has been freely given to us! We should be rejoicing! We should be celebrating! We should be feasting! We should be reveling in the wonderful graciousness of our God!
I found the following article and thought it good to add it to today’s devotion. If you will have an open mind, I believe it speak truth to you. JC
Five Reasons Not To Give Up Something for Lent
Posted March 5th @ 7:00 am by Nathan on Think Christian @ http://www.gospel.com
For Lent, I’m giving up the idea of giving up something for Lent. There are some good reasons to do it, but I can think of a few reasons not to.
1. It’s not the Self-Denial Olympics.
If the point of giving up something for Lent is nothing more than self-congratulation for feats of abstinence, I’m not interested. Fasting, in centuries of monastic practice, is only worthwhile as far as it increases your spiritual focus, your meditation, your awareness of utter dependence on God. In our diet-happy culture, simply avoiding something is itself is an accomplishment, a triumph of willpower and demonstration of self-control that, ironically, gives you a higher, not a lower, view of yourself. “The New Testament has lots to say about self-denial, but not about self-denial as an end in itself,” said C.S. Lewis in his timeless sermon “The Weight of Glory.” “We are told to deny ourselves and to take up our crosses in order that we may follow Christ.” Which brings me to #2.
2. Chocolate Ain’t a Cross.
I have friends giving up chocolate, or alcohol, or TV, or ice cream, for Lent. I admire their sacrifices. But those are still pretty trivial sacrifices. I’d be more impressed if people gave up not a minor indulgence but a supposed non-negotiable of modern life. Driving. E-mail. Mirrors. Consumer goods produced more than 100 miles from your house.
That would impress me. But I still don’t think it would impress God. “Take up your cross and follow me.” It’s a call to complete self-emptying.
3. We’re not trying to beat Christ at his own game.
Sometimes I wonder if giving up something for Lent comes out of a twinge of guilt about Jesus’ suffering—”Jesus went through so much pain for me, the least I can do in return is keep my hand out of the cookie jar for a month.” First, Christ endured hell precisely so that we don’t have to (not that a lack of cookies is hell; see #2 above). He emptied himself in order to invite us to a life of abundance. Not self-indulgence. Not indifference. Not hoarding. But abundance. A life of fasting and feasting.
4. Fuzzy Math, Part 1: 40 does not equal 46.
A pastor pointed out in passing last year that Lent is not actually 40 days, but 46. To get to 40, you have to subtract the six Sundays between Ash Wednesday and Easter. Why? Because Sunday is always a day of Resurrection, a “mini-Easter.” Our jubilance about Jesus’ defeat of death interrupts even our somberness in a season dedicated to his suffering.
That was brand new to me. But I love it; I love Easter’s persistence in piercing our gloom. Do Lenten self-deniers know this quirk of the church calendar, and do they, accordingly, let the chocolate flow on those six Sundays?
5. Fuzzy Math, Part 2: One does not equal 40.
In his stirring new book Surprised By Hope, N.T. Wright says, “I regard it as absurd and unjustifiable that we should spend forty days keeping Lent, pondering what it means, preaching about self-denial, being at least a little gloomy … and then, after [Holy Week], we have a single day of celebration.”
Easter, Wright points out, is a whole season, 40 whole days of its own before Ascension Day, not “simply the one-day happy ending tacked on to forty days of fasting and gloom,” as he puts it. So after fasting for 40 days (give or take; see #4 above), how will we feast for 40 days? Chocolate cake for dessert every night? 40 bottles of wine? Or would that would be as trivial as giving them up? No matter what, we have to let Easter be a whole season—a whole year, really—a feast that’s as good as the fast.
I am 47 years old, married to wife Vicki 27 years and have one daughter, Courtney, who is 22 years old. I am an ordained Pentecostal minister with over 30 years of ministry. My ministry motto encapsulates my philosophy of ministry - “Ministering To Serve, To Save and To Heal”. My passion is anointed, biblical and practical preaching and teaching that is relevant, realistic and exalts Jesus Christ! I am also an avid hunter, LSU football fan and St. Louis Cardinals Baseball fan
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said this on 29 Mar 2009 9:31:48 PM EST
I agree and I love this. I am going to post this entire post on facebook. But I will give you proper credientals!
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