Lent is the Christian season that takes us from the end of summer through to Easter and is linked to the time when Jesus went for 40 days without food in the desert. It is firmly attached to Easter, the principal occasion for baptism, and for the reconciliation of those who had been excluded from the church’s fellowship for serious faults. This explains the characteristic notes of Lent – self examination, penitence, study, and the preparation for Easter, to which almsgiving has traditionally been added.
As the candidates for baptism were instructed in the Christian faith, and as penitents prepared themselves through fasting and penance to be readmitted to communion, the whole Christian community was invited to join them in the process of study and repentance, the extension of which over forty days would remind them of the forty days Jesus spent in the wilderness being tested after he was baptised.
Many people ‘fast’ during Lent, which means giving up food for a day or sometimes many days. The aim is to help use time and energy thinking about God, and remembering again how to be a faithful disciple of Christ. During Lent there are a number of special days for Christians including Ash Wednesday, Mothering Sunday, Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday and Good Friday.
The beginning of Lent is marked by Shrove Tuesday. This was the day when everyone used up their best and richest food such as eggs and fat, to prepare for 40 days of limited, mini-meals! Shrove Tuesday has become known as ‘Pancake Day’, because traditionally pancakes used up the good food and made a feast to begin the season with. The word ‘Shrive’ means to confess, so people were encouraged to say sorry to God before the beginning of Lent itself.
Ash Wednesday follows the celebrations and feasting of the day before. Ash is an ancient sign of penitence. Ash is used to put a cross shaped mark on the forehead of Christians to remind them of Jesus. The ashes used on Ash Wednesday are from the burnt remains of the Palm Crosses used the year before at Easter.
The calculation of 40 days of Lent has varied considerably in Christian history. It is now usual to count them continuously to the end of Holy Week (not including Sundays, so beginning Lent on the sixth Wednesday before Easter.
Mothering Sunday is always on the 4th Sunday during Lent, and is a time when Mothers are remembered, thanked and celebrated. In this parish flowers are given away to mothers as a way of thanking them.
Palm crosses are given out on Palm Sunday as a reminder of Jesus. Palm Sunday is the day when Jesus’ ride into Jerusalem on a donkey is remembered, and people grabbed palm leaves off trees to welcome him.
Maundy Thursday comes the day before Good Friday. The word ‘Maundy’ is based on the Latin for command, remembering Jesus telling his friends to love one-another. Jesus and his friends met on Maundy Thursday before he died to have a feast celebrating the Passover. Their meal is sometimes called the Last Supper. The Last Supper is remembered in most churches with special services called Holy Communion or Eucharist.
Good Friday is the day when Jesus’ death on the cross is remembered. It is called ‘good’ because, when Jesus died, he was demonstrating God’s great love for the world, a love so great that he was prepared to lay down his life for his friends, who are you and me. His death absorbed the evil in the world and robbed it of its power. Easter Day is the Sunday when Christians celebrate Jesus rising from the dead. In the past Christians were baptised on the Saturday night before Easter, so Lent for them was a time of getting ready to baptise new Christians and instruct them in the faith.
The modern version of Lent encourages us to give things up so that we have more time to concentrate on Jesus. It is a good thing to think of our bodies as spiritual temples; therefore thinking about what we put into them and what we fill our minds with, which is why many people give up sweets or drinking alcohol at this time of year. You may want to think about giving up watching TV or playing computer games, or texting, especially if you are prone to being addicted to these forms of entertainment. This is not an end in itself. It is so that we can think more clearly about God, giving time to God in prayer, and thinking about how to live our lives according to the call of the gospel, and how to be generous in sharing what we have with others.
Some people do really good things during Lent to make a difference to others, or to change the world. This is what ‘Living Lent’ is all about! It can include simple things like letting someone else go first in a queue, to giving away the money we save from eating less to someone who is hungry.



