By Susan Brinkkmann, OCDS
Staff Journalist
In his general audience today, Pope Benedict XVI said the ashes we receive today are a sign reminding us of our status as created beings, and inviting us to penance and to a deeper commitment to conversion.
“Lent is a journey, it means accompanying Jesus as He travels to Jerusalem, the place where the mystery of His Passion, Death and Resurrection is to be fulfilled,” the Pope said today in Paul VI Hall in the presence of 7,000 faithful.
“It reminds us that Christian life is a ‘road’ to be travelled, consisting not so much in a law to be observed as in the person of Christ Himself, Who must be encountered, welcomed and followed.”
Above all, it is in participation in the liturgy that we are drawn to following this path with the Lord and reliving the events that have led us to salvation. But this not to seen as a simple commemoration or recollection of things past, he said.
“There is a keyword to indicate this, which is often repeated in the liturgy: the word ‘today’, which must be understood not metaphorically but in its original concrete sense. Today God reveals His law and we have the opportunity to choose between good and evil, between life and death.”
On Sundays during Lent we experience “a baptismal itinerary” which helps to conform “our lives to the requirements and duties of that Sacrament, which lies at the foundation of our Christian life,” he said.
“The first Sunday [of Lent], called the Sunday of temptation because it presents us with the temptation of Jesus in the desert, invites is to renew our definitive choice for God, and courageously to face the struggle that awaits us in remaining faithful to Him.”
The second Sunday is the Sunday of Abraham and the Transfiguration and, “like Abraham, father of believers, we too are invited to depart, to leave our own land, to abandon the certainties we have constructed and place our faith in God. We may glimpse our goal in the transfiguration of Christ, the beloved Son, in Whom we too become ‘children of God’.”
On the third Sunday we encounter the Samaritan woman. “Like Israel in the Exodus, in Baptism we too received the water that saves. Jesus, as He tells the Samaritan woman, has the water of life which satisfies every thirst; this water is His Spirit,” he said.
The fourth Sunday leads us to reflect on the experience of the man born blind. “In Baptism we are freed from the shades of evil and receive the light of Christ in order to live as children of light . . . ” he said.
Finally, the fifth Sunday presents us with the raising of Lazarus. “In Baptism we pass from death to life and become capable of pleasing God, of causing the old man to die so as to live in the spirit of the Risen One.”
In Church tradition the period of Lent is characterised by practices such as fasting, almsgiving and prayer, said Pope Benedict, explaining how fasting “means abstaining from food, but it also includes other forms of privation for a more abstemious life.”
It “is closely linked to almsgiving . . . which under the one name of ‘mercy’ embraces many good works.”
Moreover, during this period the Church “invites us to a more trusting and intense prayer, and to prolonged meditation on the Word of God”.
He concluded: “On this Lenten journey, let us be attentive to welcoming Christ’s invitation to follow Him more decisively and coherently, renewing the grace and commitments of our Baptism, so as to abandon the old man who is in us and clothe ourselves in Christ, thus reaching Easter renewed and being able to say with St. Paul ‘it is no longer I who live, but it is Christ who lives in me’.”
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