9 In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. 10And just as he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him.11And a voice came from heaven, ‘You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.’12 And the Spirit immediately drove him out into the wilderness. 13He was in the wilderness for forty days, tempted by Satan; and he was with the wild beasts; and the angels waited on him.
[Mark 1.9-15]
It’s the fifth day of Lent, a perfect
time to be nosy. So here’s a quick straw poll for the brave.
Who here has given something up for
Lent?
And who has slipped up already?
I have, I do almost every year. Now I
know that that might look really bad, only five days in and I’ve messed up
already.
In a way I empathise with Peter, James
and John when Jesus says to them at Gethsemane “You couldn’t stay awake for an
hour?”
It does look bad, especially
when you hold me up against Jesus and his time of testing.
He’s just had his baptism and the
Spirit immediately drives him into the desert, there’s no baptism tea,
no celebration in the pub. It’s straight up and straight out, and then he
spends forty days in the wilderness.
Now I’ve not spent a lot of time in
wildernesses, but I know they don’t have much in the way of luxuries. Food is going to be berries and insects, and
shelter is probably under a tree or amongst some rocks, at best it’s going to
be a cave.
Sunbeams
scorching all the day,
Chilly
dewdrops nightly shed,
Prowling
beasts about thy way,
Stones
thy pillow, earth thy bed.
It’s cold, bleak, uncomfortable, and
it’s for forty days.
And then there’s me, who gave up
chocolate one Lent and on about day three ate a chocolate Hob Nob, or the year
I gave up sugar in my tea but accidently sweetened it on day four, or last year,
when I tried a juice fast. But that’s another story.
And even when I get it right, I only
have to wait until day five and I get a day off, because I don’t fast on a holy
day.
[That did for me the year I gave up
cigarettes for Lent. I was doing okay,
but I was hanging on until the Sunday, and then I had about twenty and felt physically
sick.]
This is all my way of saying that I’m
no shining example when it comes to Lent, but then, are any of us when we
compare ourselves to Jesus, to God in the flesh?
No, we aren’t. We’re actually
failures. At pretty much everything we do. We’re rubbish.
I should say: please don’t take
offence at this.
But we really are pathetic.
So what’s the point of Lent, if it’s
not to go without and show our commitment to the faith? Why bother doing it if
we can’t get to day forty and say, “hey, I went without food and water
this year, so I’m automatically in Heaven’s penthouse suite”?
As I’m sure most of you know, I’m
training to be a reader and I’m studying a lot as part of the course. So, I’ve
come across this great debate about justification. Which is: are we justified by works, or by
faith alone?
Now I’ll be honest, I don’t think
there’s much of a debate here. I reckon anyone who reckons we’re made right
with God by what we do is a little bit cracked.
God asking us to justify ourselves by
our actions is a bit like me expecting my seven year-old daughter Faith to do
the housework.
Yes I encourage her to take part, but
the job takes twice as long and I often have to go back and do bits of it again
to bring it up to scratch.
So why bother? Why don’t I plonk her
in front of the TV and do the job myself, faster and more efficiently? Parents, grandparents, aunties and uncles,
you know the answer: it’s because I love her; it’s because I enjoy her company;
because even if it takes me longer to get the washing up done, and secretly
putting some things back in the washing up bowl, seeing her having a good time
with the bubbles is worth every extra minute.
She thinks she’s helping me.
But she is making the job more
enjoyable.
The time spent doing the housework
with her passes quicker than doing it myself, because it’s fun.
So, let’s go back to the question:
what’s the point of Lent?
Lent is about self-denial, it is
about going without things, but it’s not about scoring points, or earning
anything. Nothing we do can possibly pay back God for everything he’s already
done for us.
He came to earth as a human being,
he lived among us (in a time before central heating, and the minimum wage, and
Wi-Fi), and he died a horrible death.
Giving up chocolate isn’t going to make up for that.
But it doesn’t have to. That’s not why
we do it.
It’s about relationships. Giving something up is a good way to shake us
out of complacency and thinking that we’ve got it cracked. It’s a way to get us to refocus our
attention. It helps us appreciate the
joy of Easter all the more.
Lent is for us.
Some of you be like wha?
What did Jesus say in Matthew 6?
‘And whenever you
fast, do not look dismal, like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces
so as to show others that they are fasting. Truly I tell you, they have
received their reward. But when you fast, put oil on your head and wash
your face, so that your fasting may be seen not by others but by your
Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you.’
Now I ask you, did Jesus ever tell
people to lie?
No? Then he wasn’t say pretend to be
suffering. He was saying don’t pretend
that you are suffering.
Lent isn’t about making yourself
miserable, if that’s all you do then you’re missing the point. Lent is about coming closer to God.
I know we’re already five days in, but
I would like to make a suggestion, call it a plea if you will. Whether you’ve
given things up this Lent or not, as of tonight, or tomorrow morning, can you
make a promise to draw closer to God for the rest of this season?
That might mean read the Bible more if
you read it daily, can you do it twice daily? Or it might mean to pray more
fully — twenty minutes instead of ten.
I don’t know what your relationship
with God is like, so I can’t tell you what you should do.
But I know that God loves you even
more than I love my kids, and I know that he would love for you to want to
spend more time with him.
No comments:
Post a Comment