Lent

Shrove Tuesday - Pancake Tuesday

As a child, I was unfamiliar with Pancake/Shrove Tuesday and the traditions surrounding it, but my best friend and her family invited me to their church for supper, where I was able to experience the festivities firsthand. Of course, there were the pancakes but beyond the food, was the sense of community and camaraderie that comes with sharing a meal together.

Events like this can provide us with an opportunity to come together and celebrate our shared values, while also acknowledging the importance of reflection and repentance. And, you experience firsthand a chance to form connections with others in the community. As a child I did not understand the significance of “Pancake Tuesday” only that it was a lot of fun and delicious! Many friends I know still ask - WHAT IS SHROVE TUESDAY?

Shrove Tuesday, also known as Pancake Day, is a significant day in the Christian faith, marking the start of the Lenten season. It is a day of celebration and preparation, where people indulge in rich and indulgent foods before the start of a period of fasting and sacrifice.

The origin of Shrove Tuesday can be traced back to medieval times when people would confess their sins and receive absolution, or "shrive" themselves before the start of Lent. It was a time of preparation for the penitential season, where Christians would make sacrifices, give alms, and focus on their relationship with God.

As the custom of confessing one's sins before Lent waned, the focus shifted to food, and Shrove Tuesday became associated with indulging in rich foods. Pancakes, in particular, became a traditional food as they were a way of using up ingredients like sugar, butter, and eggs that would be forbidden during Lent. Pancakes were also seen as a symbol of unity, as they could be made easily and quickly, bringing people together to celebrate and enjoy each other's company.

From a faith perspective, Shrove Tuesday is an important reminder that we need to take the time to reflect on our relationship with God and prepare ourselves for the Lenten season. It is a time to confess our sins, seek forgiveness, and commit to making positive changes in our lives. The indulgent foods we enjoy on this day should not distract us from this central message; rather, they should serve as a reminder that we need to make sacrifices and give up our worldly desires in order to focus on our spiritual well-being.

Shrove Tuesday is a day of celebration and joy, but it is also a time for reflection and repentance. As we indulge in our pancakes and other treats, let us take the opportunity to reflect on our relationship with God and commit to making positive changes in our lives. Let us remember the true meaning of this day and the importance of preparing ourselves for the Lenten season.

-Connie Rodgers, Guest Blog

Creating You - only BETTER!

“How does your best self feel?”

Image: Unsplash/Alysha Rosly

This question posed by Nature’s Bounty in its current supplement product’s commercial caught my attention. As the season of Lent begins on February 22nd, I am wondering if this question might provide a pathway for Lenten journeying.  The season of Lent traditionally calls upon the faithful to spend time in self-reflection in the pursuit of spiritual renewal. Thinking of one’s best self could engender a desire for creating concrete ways needed to experience your YOU - only BETTER!

-Sister Nancy Wales, csj

Holy Saturday - Time “In-Between”

Image: Unsplash/Pisit Heng

The Paschal Mystery we have just celebrated in the Western Christian Churches is written about by theologians as one event beginning with Holy Thursday through to the Easter celebration of Resurrection.  However, this time is filled with so many events that our human experience and understanding requires that we pause from one day to the next to help us more fully enter into the Mystery of the passion, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  I like to think of Holy Saturday as “in-between” time.  What does this mean?

This is time to pause to help us enter the mystery of which we are a part.  This time is where we live our lives – between birth and death and rebirth into communion with God.  As we learn from the life of Jesus we are invited into the journey of love.  Any of us who watch the news or read the newspapers know that so much of what we see and read, is the opposite of love.  We see a false sense of power which destroys life and love.

Image: Unsplash/Alicia Quan

This Holy Saturday if each of us paused just long enough to consider how life can teach us to love and not to be lured into a false sense of power.  Jesus before Pontius Pilate remained detached from the power of Pilate.  Jesus understands that he too has power that is of God.  We desire to know this and can only learn its truth if we stop to listen for that longing in our hearts.  Our longing for what is yet to be realized is part of the birth of what is yet to come.   To long for love in our lives and our world is to be part of the creation of love.  To desire wellness for our families and the earth is to stir the energies within us that can be transformed into words and actions of well-being for our world.  This is the holy desire we touch on days like “Holy Saturday”.  In the words of John Philip Newell, “…This is the holy desire we can be part of, to long for oneness even in the most broken and apparently God-forsaken places of our lives and our world.  Desire leads to conception and conception leads to birth.”  This is how we walk this journey of life and love.  Blessing of love for all.

- Sister Joan Atkinson, CSJ

HOLY THURSDAY

Behold a broken world we pray where want and war increase.

At no other time have the opening lines of this hymn been so profound in meaning. (CBW 538)

I write this blog a few weeks ahead of April 14. I don’t know what the world situation will be on that day, but the particularity of today is concrete: bombings, death, homelessness, displaced children, beauty demolished, apologies being sought. With such a reality how might we approach the church’s liturgy and sing in the Pange Lingua: “Hail the Blood which, shed for sinners, did a broken world restore”, a broken world restore.”

We feast on unleavened bread and wine transformed to be for us total embodiment in Christ. We feast sometimes with wavering hope, wanting oh so much to be confident, that our broken world will be restored in the here and now. In the same liturgy we ritualize the humbling act of foot washing, knowing that we too are called to serve, called to engage in making our broken world whole again. But when O God . . . when? Lament and sorrow are so real. Is not the self-giving of Christ the vessel in which to hold the present moment? The One who is Love itself holding the world in the tragedy of the moment.

The Holy Thursday liturgy is the grounding place to move into the darkness of Good Friday and the silence of Holy Saturday. It invites us to be for others just as Christ: washing feet, sharing the gifts of the earth, seeking a better world where all races, genders, creeds are one. The liturgy teaches us ways of being, that weave the world community together.

It invites us to be for others just as Christ: washing feet, sharing the gifts of the earth, seeking a better world where all races, genders, creeds are one. The liturgy teaches us ways of being, that weave the world community together.

Nations are welcoming, clothing, feeding those fleeing from the violence. Other nations are financing care. In the midst of the tragedy, I heard a Ukrainian woman challenge us not to forget the millions who are fleeing other violent, oppressive regimes. The human heart beats with every breath: love one another.

The hymn I first quoted ends this way:

Bring Lord, your better world to birth, . . . .  Where peace with God, and peace on earth and peace eternal reign.  (Hymn text by Timothy Dudley Smith, Catholic Book of Worship III #538)

At the end of the Holy Thursday liturgy, we pray together in deep silence, so too in this moment . . .

-Sister Loretta Manzara, csj

Palm Sunday

Who doesn’t love a parade? So much coming together to prepare (Luke 19: 28-40), to celebrate an event or accomplishment with colour, singing and cheering. In ancient times parades also included the use of palms to prepare the way for those being celebrated and loud Hosannas rang out. Palm branches, which symbolized goodness, wellbeing, grandeur, steadfastness and/or victory, were strewn before the celebrated persons. And so it was fitting that after all the wonders of Jesus’ public life he was welcomed to Jerusalem in exactly that manner.     

This Palm Sunday the readings drawn me to journey with the apostles. (Philippians 2:6-11, Luke 22: 14, 23-56)

They must have been so excited and engaged as they witnessed Jesus’ amazing welcome. Suddenly they would have been in a daze - things started to change in frightening ways. Over the Passover dinner Jesus tells them how eager He was to eat this Passover with them before He “suffers”. He invites them to take bread and wine “in memory” of Him. What did He mean “suffer” and where was He going? Jesus asks them to become servants and then confers on them a kingdom like the one his Father conferred on him. Servants, really? What kingdom? They were told Satan would sift them, but Jesus prayed their faith would not fail. Peter, ever the man of action, confirmed his faith by saying he would go to prison or die for Jesus. Quickly he heard the prediction from Jesus that he would in fact deny Jesus three times. Then Judas who was found to be planning to betray Jesus left the dinner only to return later to hand Jesus over for persecution. And then the unthinkable happened, Jesus was led away, tortured, and crucified. All of this happened within two days. No wonder they ran away, no wonder they were frightened. They had no time to process, to think through their responses and no time to pray. They had no idea how the story ended but we do.

Sadly, stories of injustice, persecution and death abound today. As apostles, how do we respond? Running away, putting heads in the sand or hiding the truth are not options for those of faith. Finding strength in faith, in communion with others and through compassionate action is where I hope to find myself.

How about you?

-Maureen Condon

Header Image: Unsplash/Brooke Lark