Thursday 2 March 2017

On Going Slow

Lent is a desert. It partakes of that holy isolation beloved of early church ascetics, in contrast to those who dwell naturally in the desert, who may find it quite a crowded place. For there are invisible cities and rungs of association, even in the most spacious desert.
            It’s called quaresima, ‘forty days’. As if these were the only 40 days there are. In Advent, we look forward, but in Lent we look back. Our whole salvation history lies in Lent. And we have time to repent: slowly, lento, as music wants to reflect on a phrase or develop a theme.
            Thank God, we can stop pretending to be what we are not: invincible, immortal, insatiable. We consume less. Live as Ecclesiastes says, between frugality and feast. We jettison what will not float: I like to start with prejudices (still got many). We exercise the virtue of moderation.
            Why Lent? Why the liturgical year at all? Why liturgy, come to that? The liturgies of antiquity were obligations of the rich to civic benefaction, keeping the city in everything:  aqueducts, baths, libraries, public banquets. A liturgy lasted all year. We could embrace a Lenten liturgy: giving up, and taking up.


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