What Are You Giving Up For Lent?

So…”what are you giving up for Lent?” Isn’t that always the question? As if that is the reason for the season. Growing up, everything I remember about Lent circled around the acts of self-denial – what food, entertainment or habit one would give up and how hard it was to deny oneself of that thing. It was not always made clear that the denial was meant to help one think about God and Christ’s sacrifice. Continue reading

Outside the Camp

He shall dwell apart, making his abode outside the camp” (Lev 13:46) – frightening and dreadful words.  Spoken to a people in the wilderness, a people on the Exodus betwixt and between the slavery of Egypt and the promised land of Palestine. These are words spoken about brothers, sisters, mothers, and fathers.

Can you imagine being on this long journey to freedom in which your entire life is comprised of the people with whom you travel.  There are no others. They are your life. The ones on whom your depend to carry the burdens of the encampment – searching for firewood, mending clothing, tending the livestock, repairing the tents, finding and hauling water, and the list goes on. They are the ones upon whom you depend for safety, for hunting. The one with whom you sit around the fires at night telling the stories of the Exodus, the time of slavery, time of Father Abraham and Mother Sarah. The stories of who you were and who you are.  There are no others. They are your life. Continue reading

Christian Simplicity

There is perhaps no single theme which embodies – at least in one word – the life of St. Francis of Assisi.  But Francis was not born to a simple way of life, rather he was born into a world emerging from the feudal period of European history in a time when the merchant class was rising in power in the new era of trade and the novel notion of money.

What was it that made Giovanni Bernardone, son of wealthy cloth merchant Pietro, eventually become the one known to history as Francis of Assisi? It is a story of a movement from the trends and standards of the society around him to one in which he began to refound his life upon the Gospel – to take the values of the Word of God as the guide to life – his entire life and then be converted. Continue reading