Towards a More Meaningful
Lent
Subhash
Anand
43subhash@gmail.com
Soon we will begin
the holy season of Lent. In all spheres of our life―secular and religious, real
growth is not possible without evaluation. This, in turn, is not possible
without taking time out and reflecting on what we are doing. During Lent we observe some special
practices. What exactly is the goal of our Lenten observances? Is what we have
been traditionally doing during Lent really effective? Are they truly helping
us to attain the goal we have placed before ourselves? During Lent Many make
sure they do not miss the Sunday Mass, and some even attend Mass on weekdays.
Many abstain from non-vegetarian food, alcohol and tobacco during Lent. They do
so in a spirit of penance. Some others, especially religious trained in earlier
formation houses, fast every Friday and pray with hands stretched out. Some
even scourge themselves. Many Catholics participate in the Way of the Cross and
recite the family rosary more regularly.
Lent calls us to metanoia. This word is made up of the
prefix meta, which has many meaning. At times it suggests change, ‘metamorphosis’
(= transformation, transmutation. The word nous means mind. Hence, metanoia means a different way of
looking at life. This is real conversion. Most of us plan our life, and
sometimes even want to plan the life of others. Conversion means looking at our
life and the life of others the way God looks at it. Then the desire to know
and do God’s will become our main concern not merely during Lent, but all
through our life. This is exactly what we are asking for when we say the Lord’s
Prayer: “Your will be done on earth as in heaven.” We need to be more attentive
to what we say in our prayers. God reveals his will to us through Jesus. Jesus
gives us only one command: “Love one another as I have loved you.” That is the
essence of Christian life. All else is totally secondary. Hence all our Lenten
observances―Eucharist, devotions, penance―must make us more sensitive and
concerned for others, especially the poor. In fact this is exactly what the
prophets, the conscience-keepers of Israel, tell us.
Our Sunday
observance has its roots in the Old Testament Sabbath. The full significance of
the Sabbath is revealed when we read two important texts concerning it.
Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days you
shall labour, and do all your work; but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the
LORD your God; in it you shall not do any work, you, or your son, or your
daughter, your manservant, or your maidservant, or your cattle, or the
sojourner who is within your gates; for in six days the LORD made heaven and
earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested the seventh day; therefore
the LORD blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it (Ex 20. 8-11).
Observe the Sabbath day, to keep it holy, as the LORD
your God commanded you. Six days you shall labour, and do all your work; but
the seventh day is a Sabbath to the LORD your God; in it you shall not do any
work, you, or your son, or your daughter, or your manservant, or your
maidservant, or your ox, or your ass, or any of your cattle, or the sojourner
who is within your gates, that your manservant and your maidservant may rest as
well as you. You shall remember that you were a servant in the land of Egypt, and
the LORD your God brought you out thence with a mighty hand and an outstretched
arm; therefore the LORD your God commanded you to keep the Sabbath day (Deut
5.12-15).
There are two important
features that need to be noted.
1) Both
the texts do not make any reference to worship or cult. There is no obligation
to attend some liturgical service. The struggle to bring about a just society
is the true worship of God. 2) Two reasons are given why the Sabbath needs to
be observed. After six days of work God rested. Hence we all are called to
rest. The Israelites were slaves
in Egypt and Yahweh liberated them from bonded labour. It is this liberating
act of God that explains why both the texts spell out fully the obligation to
rest: not only the Israelites who were working, but also their sons, daughters,
men-servants, maids, cattle and even the sojourner living with them must be
given rest. In Egypt the Israelites worked all the days of the week, and their
masters rested whenever they wanted. The Israelites may be tempted to imitate
their former masters. If they do so they will not be Yahweh’s people. The text
explicitly mentions women: daughters and maids. A patriarchal society tends to
treat women as secondary citizens. The Sabbath is the celebration of a society
where all are equal, all are respected. The Sabbath is a symbol of justice. The
celebration of the Sabbath is just not one part of our struggle to bring about
a truly free society. It sums up what that society ought to be: without justice
all other virtues lose their significance, and our freedom becomes monstrous.
The more we get institutionalized, the more we cultify the prophetic vision of
Jesus: cult tends to displace justice.
The centrality of justice for the observance of Sabbath
becomes clear also from the teaching of the prophets. Even a sojourner or a
eunuch, who keeps the Sabbath, will be taken by Yahweh into His holy temple on
His holy mountain (Is 56.2-7). On the other hand, if the Israelites profane the
Sabbath, then Jerusalem will be destroyed (Jer 17.19-27). When there is
injustice, then the Sabbath and all the cultic activities of Israel become a
‘burden’ for God, which He cannot endure, which He hates. The incense in the
temple begins to stink, and God turns a deaf year to the prayer of His people
(Is 1.12-15; Amos 5.21-23). He admonishes them: “Wash yourselves; make
yourselves clean; remove the evil of your doings from before my eyes; cease to
do evil, learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; defend the
fatherless, plead for the widow” (Is 1.16-17).
No prophet brings out the disastrous consequences of
neglecting the Sabbath and the inseparable call to justice as does Amos. God
threatens those who violate His law:
Hear this, you who trample upon the needy, and bring the
poor of the land to an end, saying, “When will the new moon be over, that we
may sell grain? And the Sabbath, that we may offer wheat for sale, that we may
make the ephah small and the shekel great, and deal deceitfully with false
balances, that we may buy the poor for silver and the needy for a pair of
sandals, and sell the refuse of the wheat?”
I will make the sun go down at noon, and darken the
earth in broad daylight. I will turn your feasts into mourning, and all your
songs into lamentation; I will bring sackcloth upon all loins, and baldness on
every head; I will make it like the mourning for an only son, and the end of it
like a bitter day.
Behold, the days are coming when I will send a famine on
the land; not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing the
words of the LORD. They shall wander from sea to sea, and from north to east;
they shall run to and fro, to seek the word of the LORD, but they shall not
find it. (8.4-6, 10-12)
When Israel neglects the Sabbath and the concomitant obligation of
justice, then its liturgy becomes totally futile, nay a source of pain and
suffering. Then her people will not get to hear the Word of the Lord, however
much they may want it. All the sermons of bishops and priests will be empty.
The people will continue to get stones instead of bread (Mt 9.7). If Israel
cannot hear the Word of God, then it can by no means preach it. It has no
reason to exist. This is also true of the New Israel.
Justice is a
central concern of the Old Testament, especially with the prophets since they
were sent to call Israel to repentance. We have seen how through Isaiah and
Amos Yahweh rejects the fasting and cultic practices of Israel due to their
infidelity. He demands that they practice justice instead (Is 1.17; Amos 5.24).
Yahweh’s insistence on justice is most visible in the first song of the Servant
of Yahweh. He has a mission to all nations. Yahweh tells us three times that
His Servant will bring justice to all (42.1, 3, 4). The God of the Old
Testament has a preferential love for the poor and the oppressed. Jesus, the
prophet from Nazareth, sums up his life and mission in the manifesto he
presented in the synagogue of his village (Lk 4.18-19):
The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has
anointed me to preach good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to
set at liberty those who are oppressed,
to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.
The quotation in
Lk 4.18-19 is taken from Is 61.1-2, except the words in bold, which are
from 58.6. Why did Luke complicate his account of an event which otherwise
seems to be so simple?
In Ch 58, Yahweh pronounces
judgement on people who oppress others and still try to give the impression of
being pious:
Behold, in the day of your fast you seek your own pleasure,
and oppress all your workers...
Is not this the fast that I choose?
to loose the bonds of
wickedness,
to undo the thongs of the
yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
and to break every yoke?” (vv
3b, 6).
The prophet explicitly mentions those who oppress their workers. In bringing the two texts together, Luke wants to make it clear
that the people whom Jesus has come to set free are not merely sinners
(spiritual oppression) but also the victims of different forms of injustice
(social oppression). Had he not done this, he would not have been proclaiming
the Kingdom of His Father. Had he not done this, he would not have been
crucified, and then there would be no Church, and the question of celebrating a
jubilee or the Eucharist would not arise at all.
Many of us employ
other people either in our institutions or homes. Do we deal with them with
respect? Are we sensitive to their dignity as children the one Father? Do we
pay them an equitable salary? Do we after some time of service make them
permanent? Even our daily paid workers deserve the day of rest for which God
created the Sabbath. It should be holiday with pay. Then they and we will
celebrate the Lord’s day as a holy day―not by going to the Church, but by
reaching out to our neighbour. Without justice there is no love neighbour.
Without love of neighbour our participation in the Eucharist and other pious
exercises and all our penance do not serve any purpose.
Lent is not a
season, but an attitude that ought to guide us all through the year: concern
for our neighbour is the is highest worship, and the self-denial that is called
for in loving others is the greatest penance. As a result of consumerism, all
of us―bishops, priests, religious and laity―are spending a lot money on costly celebrations, glamorous buildings, and
non-productive meetings―be they academic or administrative. In a way we cannot
blame the laity. They are following their supposedly religious leaders. In a
country, where so many do not get the bare minimum even after putting in hard
work, this waste is unacceptable. Some quote Jesus: “Let her alone, let her
keep it for the day of my burial. The poor you always have with you, but you do
not always have me” (Jn 12.7-8). I wish these people too were being prepared
for their burial. When we spend money on ourselves without real need, we are insulting
the poor whom God has chosen (James 2.5-6).
Jesus also tells us
that our liturgy will not be acceptable if we are not reconciled with our
sisters and brothers: “So if you are offering your gift at the altar, and there
remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there
before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother, and then come and
offer your gift” 5.23-24). This is true of all our prayers, pious practices and
corporal penance will not be acceptable to his Abba if we do not forgive
sisters and brothers. “And whenever you stand praying, forgive, if you have
anything against any one; so that your Father also who is in heaven may forgive
you your trespasses” (Mk 11.25). We remind ourselves of this insistence of
Jesus every time we pray as he taught us: “Forgive us our sins as we forgive
those who have sinned against us” (Mt 6.12). Sometimes it is not easy to
forgive. We may harbour resentment and ill will for days, weeks, and months.
When we forgive others we die to ourselves, and we share in the saving death of
Jesus. Lent is an invitation to be reconciled first with our neighbour, and
then will our God.
The text in Lk 4.19
has the words “and recovering of sight
to the blind.” A change of heart comes through enlightenment. This
explains why in our land there is so much insistence on darshana: the ability to see. It was because he was enlightened
that Siddhartha became Buddha―the enlightened one. Much before he joined
Ignatius Loyola and his band, Francis Borgia was in touch with him. On one
occasion he wrote to his spiritual guide, seeking his permission to undertake
fasting. Ignatius wrote back: “Do not fast. Instead study theology.” That was a
brilliant piece of advice, given by the first General of the Society of Jesus
to the future General, by one saint to another. The Jesuits have been in the
forefront of the growth of the Church since their foundation. If they were suppressed,
it was because like Jesus, to whose company they belong, they took up the cause
of the poor and antagonize the rich and the powerful. Without theology we end
up by being fundamentalists. I regret to say many adult Catholics and even
religious women―in spite of all their formation―have not gone beyond the
catechism they learnt for their First Communion.
I have spent
thirty-five on the staff of two major seminaries. I have served as visiting
faculty in other major seminaries and scholasticates. I have been a resource
person for a gathering of bishops and priest-representatives of the Agra
ecclesiastical province (1993), of the Hindi-speaking dioceses (1980), and for
a CBCI meeting (1988). I have preached retreats to over a hundred groups of
priests; conducted theology seminars and formation programmes for priests
serving in ‘missions’ and parishes, seminary staff and young priests; and
assisted major seminary staff in evaluating their performance. Thus I have met
members of the clergy across the country. What is very disturbing is that many
priests and bishops whose knowledge of theology is inadequate for meaningful
ministry today. What is still worse, they are not prepared to admit that
intellectually they need updating. Let me give you one example.
At the 1988 CBCI
meeting, I was so put off by the discussion of the bishops. Many had not really
come prepared, and most were not competent to handle the issues they were
discussing. I was feeling horribly humiliated: these are our leaders! One
auxiliary bishop―a late vocation, and who had been the rector of major city in
a very modernised part of India―had the courage to say: “Bishops, let us be
more serious, otherwise people will laugh at us.” After the meeting that I told
Archbishop Casimir, S.J.: “The next time you have a CBCI meeting, please
organize a seminar for the bishops on the topic you plan to discuss at the meeting.”
He replied: “Subhash, the bishops who do not need that seminar will come, but
the bishops who really need it, will not turn up.” If what another Jesuit,
Cardinal Carlo Martini said: “the Church is 200 years behind time,” is true―and
I am convinced it is―then it is primarily due to bishops and priests who do not
know enough of theology. Without theology the Church just cannot move ahead. Doing
some serious reading will be a real Lenten observance for all of us, but very
especially for bishops and priests. It will broaden our horizon, and contribute
towards our conversion, our metanoia.
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