Is Lent Dead?

by Father Paul A. Duffner, O.P.

On
the front cover of TIME magazine,
April 8, 1966, there
appeared in large bold type
three words: "Is God
Dead?" The question referred, among other
things, to the apparent lack of any impact that religion
seemed to have on the lives of so many people today.
When this issue of THE ROSARY, LIGHT AND LIFE reaches
you, Lent will already be well under way. Has this season made any
difference in your mode of living? With all the mitigation of the Lenten
mortifications in recent years, and the
apparent lack of impact on the lives of so many Catholics, one might be
tempted to ask: "Is
Lent Dead?"
Many of us can remember the time when Lent was truly a
time set aside for mortification: when we
tried to cut down on the sweets, the smokes, the drinks, the movies, etc. And
before the advent of television, giving up the movies was for some no small
sacrifice. Has this former concept of
mortification and
penance become outdated?
It is not Lent with its
mortification that is outdated or dead, it is
man’s sense of the need of
it that has been deadened. The constant
bombardment of a materialistic and worldly viewpoint - through the TV, the
movies, the newspapers and magazines, the schools, etc. has done much to confuse
and obscure the minds of Catholics, so that
the moral conscience of many has been
clouded. As Pope John Paul II
declared in his
Apostolic Exhortation on Reconciliation and Penance (4), "when
the conscience has been weakened the sense of God is also obscured, and as a
result . . . the sense of sin is lost".
And where there is lost the abiding
conviction that we are sinners, there is
lost the sense of the need of
mortification. Let us examine briefly how
this subtle deadening of our sense of sin
and of the need of mortification can come
about.
The Spirit of the World
Saint John wrote in his First Epistle (2:25),
"love not the world, nor the things of which are in the
world. If any man love the world, the charity of the Father is not in him".
What is this "world" which we are forbidden
to love?
The first book of the
Bible tells us that the world and all the goods it contains are
God’s creatures, and that everything
God made is good.
So the fault lies not in the world, but in
man, who because of his
wounded nature easily becomes overly
attached to the world’s goods and pleasures, and seeks them excessively.
The world need not be an obstacle to
sanctity. Many saints lived in it, came in
contact with its allurements, but through a life of
prayer and self-discipline, remained detached from its attractions.
They lived "in the world", but were not
of the world. They were not contaminated by the
spirit of the world, because they were so
filled with the spirit of Christ. These
two
things are mutually exclusive of each other, so that the more
one grows in the
heart of man,
the more the other is excluded.
Each of us, as the result of the
three-fold concupiscence of our
fallen nature (avarice,
lust, pride),
has deeply rooted in him the "seeds of worldliness".
In the measure that these seeds and inclinations grow and dominate us, in that
measure they block the growth of grace;
while on the contrary, as grace grows, this
deep inclination to seek excessively the world’s pleasures is gradually
diminished.
We must be aware of the battle
that is necessary to insure this growth. As we have already stated, as one comes
under the influence of the "world" with its
false maxims and attractions, his spiritual perception tends to be dulled. If
there is not a constant struggle to live our life according to the
spirit of Christ, it is being shaped by an
environment that is hostile to
Christ. Living in a materialistic culture,
and constantly being bombarded with its ideas, unless there is a conscious
effort to seek the guiding norms of the Gospel, we slowly and
imperceptibly tend to accept the world’s evaluation of things.
The Need of Self-Discipline
That the world contains many attractions that are in
themselves sinful (if deliberately sought)
few will deny. But these are not the main snares
that most of us have to guard against. For many persons, the main stumbling
blocks are things which are in themselves lawful (hence so easy to
justify), but which are so attractive and satisfying that it is difficult to
seek them in moderation.
A few examples will clarify what we mean: There is nothing
wrong with enjoying food, but how easy it is to over-eat. It is not wrong to
drink an alcoholic beverage, but how many get themselves in trouble because of
the lack of moderation. It is not wrong to watch television - it can be very
educational and wholesomely entertaining, - but because of the general content
of a good portion of its programs, and of its ability to captivate the
mind and monopolize our time, and because of
its accessibility, it can and does pose some real
problems. It is not wrong to play cards, even with a little money on
the table; but how easy it is to get involved over one’s head. There is nothing
wrong with wanting nice clothes, or enjoying nice things of various sorts; but
how easy it is to be extravagant with the resources that
God has entrusted to our care, and unmindful of others in
want, etc. As Saint Paul warns, there
are many things that are lawful, but which are not expedient (1Corinthians
10:22).
We Can't Serve Both God and Mammon
It should be clear then, that a good portion of the excesses
for which people will have to answer to God,
involve things that are good in themselves,
but which through lack of self-discipline and moderation,
were sought excessively. The more satisfying a
good thing is, the more difficult it is to use or seek it with
moderation; and therefore the greater the need of occasional
self-denial.
As we know from our own experience, our
mind cannot fully attend to two things
at the same time. In the measure that our attention is absorbed by one thing, to
that extent it is incapable of giving full attention to something else. In a
similar way, our heart cannot fully cling to
two diverse things at the same time. In the
measure that man’s heart is held captive by
created goods (lawful though they may be), in that measure he is
incapable of serving and giving his heart to
the Creator of those goods, that is, of "loving
God with our whole heart, our whole soul, our whole mind", as we have
been commanded to do (Matthew 22:37). We cannot serve both
God and mammon
(Matthew 6:24).
As Father Van Zeller puts it, "it
isn’t strictly the extent to which a man is in water that cause’s drowning; it
is the extent to which water is in him". So it is not how much a
person (through the duties of his life) is surrounded by the distractions and
allurements of the world that causes his downfall,
but how much these dominate his heart.
The Full Meaning of Penance
The notion that many persons have of
penance is quite superficial, extending merely to
acts of self-denial. These are part of
Christian penance, but the true notion of
that virtue must go deeper than that.
Pope John Paul II, in his "Apostolic
Exhortation on Reconciliation and Penance" pointed out that the
concept of penance is complex, for it
involves an inner change of heart, and an
exterior "changing of one’s life in harmony with the
change of heart". (4)
The INTERIOR ASPECT has to do with
sorrow for sin,
and with a firm resolve to amend one’s life and offer satisfaction for the
sins committed; the EXTERIOR ASPECT
has to do with the self-denial, the
good works, the
sacrifices - made in correcting one’s faults
and in expiation for them, and seen as a
necessary means of overcoming the selfish tendencies
that lead us to sin. The need of this
exterior discipline is clear if we recall the weakness
of human nature due to
original sin, for "the flesh lusts
against the spirit, and the spirit against me flesh; the two are directly
opposed" (Galatians 5:17). As Pope John Paul II
explained:
"Doing penance is something authentic and effective
only if it is translated into deeds and acts of penance. In this sense
penance means, in the Christian theological and spiritual vocabulary,
asceticism, that is to say, the concrete daily effort of a person, supported
by grace, to lose his or her own life for Christ as the only means of
gaining it (Mt. 16:25) . . . an effort to overcome in oneself what is of the
flesh in order that what is spiritual may prevail; a continual effort to
rise from the things of here below to the things where Christ is (Col. 3:1).
Penance is therefore a conversion that passes from the heart to deeds and
then to the Christian’s whole life". (ibid.)
This is in accord with the notion of
penance the Mother of
God asked of the three young children at
Fatima. As Sister Lucia explained, the
penance Our Lady asked includes
not only individual personal sacrifices and
self denial, but also and especially the
sacrifices and
effort involved in keeping God’s
commandments, and in fulfilling the
God-given duties of one’s state in life.
Pope John XXIII and Penance
After Pope John XXIII issued his
Encyclical "Paenitentiam Agere",
officially proclaiming the second Ecumenical Vatican Council, he urged
the faithful to make a worthy spiritual preparation for that great event by
means of "prayer . . . and voluntary mortification"
(2).
Pope John stressed both the interior and the
exterior aspects of penance mentioned
above. Speaking of interior repentance, he said:
"Our first need is for internal repentance; the
detestation of sin, and the determination to make amends for it. This is the
repentance shown by those who make a good Confession, take part in the
Eucharistic Sacrifice and receive Holy Communion. The faithful should be
specially encouraged to do this . . . for external acts of penance are quite
obviously useless unless accompanied by a clear conscience and the
detestation of sin . . ." (28).
As to outward acts of penance,
the Holy Father continued:
"But the faithful must also be encouraged to do
outward acts of penance, both to keep their bodies under the strict control
of reason and faith, and to make amends for their own and other people’s
sins. St. Paul was caught up to the third heaven - he reached to summit of
holiness - and yet he had no hesitation in saying of himself: 'I chastise my
body and bring it into subjection. . .' (29).
". . . External penance includes particularly
the acceptance from God in a spirit of resignation and trust all of life’s
sorrows and hardships, and of everything that involves inconvenience and
annoyance in the conscientious performance of the obligations of our daily
life and work and the practice of Christian virtue . . . (30).
". . . But besides bearing in a Christian spirit
the inescapable annoyances and sufferings of this life, the faithful ought
also to take the initiative in doing voluntary acts of penance and offering
them to God . . ." (31).
The Conflict Within Man
There is within every Christian, then, a
battle between two
opposing forces for the domination of his heart.
Within him are the roots of worldliness - rooted in his
fallen nature, which make him inclined to
accept the MAXIMS OF THE WORLD, which unduly exalt pleasure, comfort,
riches, independence, renown, power, etc., and to fix his
heart on them to the neglect of God
and the detriment of his
soul. There is also in him the
grace of Christ, which brings with
it at least a minimum of knowledge and
acceptance of the MAXIMS OF CHRIST - in
direct opposition to those of the world. Unfortunately, man possesses these
divine gifts imperfectly, and understands
them obscurely. The grace of baptism, which
brings a sharing in the life of Christ, does
not suppress the roots of worldliness, yet it does give the power to struggle
against them. Hence the conflict within us
between the spirit of the world and the spirit
of Christ.
How difficult is victory
in this battle we all know; yet there is
room for perfect confidence that the grace of Christ
will win out, if we but do what we can, namely: 1) bring self-discipline to bear
on the obvious points of weakness, and 2) make frequent and fervent use of the
means of grace, especially
prayer, the
sacraments, and works of mercy.
These means of grace are as indispensable as
the self-discipline, for triumph over worldliness and the weaknesses of the
flesh will never be accomplished alone. It
will be accomplished in the measure that we grow in
grace, for in that measure we will share in the strength and triumph
of Him Who said: "Take
courage, I have overcome the world" (John 16:33).

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