A little about the time before Easter...
Signs of spring are here.
Birds are beginning to build nests.
Flowers are starting to bloom. Soon farmers will be turning the soil and
preparing the ground for seed. All around us nature is waking up. Preparation
is being made for another growth cycle.
Within this growth cycle of spring, Easter is coming. It
finds its way into the spring calendar every year, its date moving like a
Mexican jumping bean. Have you ever wondered why? Why don't we have a fixed
date for Easter as we do for Christmas?
In the early church, bishops in the East and those in Rome
were celebrating the Easter feast on different Sundays. Apparently there was no
unanimity on the date of Jesus' resurrection. So when the bishops came together
to address some deep theological matters in Nicaea in 325 A.D., they addressed
this practical issue of ensuring the same day was chosen to celebrate the
Easter feast every year. Since there was no strong consensus on the original
date, they felt that Sunday was the most appropriate date to celebrate.
Changing to a uniform date did away with any future arguments about the true
Easter date.
The new system, determined by the moon's phases, ensured
that the Easter feasts would jump around within a small window of dates. Tying
the dates to the moon phases ensured that no one could get the dates wrong
again. Such dating sounds strange to modern ears, but it made very good sense
to people of the fourth century who were tied to the land and the heavens. The
council of Nicaea decided that Easter would be celebrated on the Sunday
following the first full moon that occurred after the spring equinox. Because
of the way the lunar calendar cycles, Easter must occur between March 22 and
April 25.
...And a little about Lent
The preparation for Easter became known as Lent, which comes
from the Old English word "lencten," meaning "lengthen" as
the days do as winter gives way to spring.
According to the liturgical calendar, Lent begins on Ash Wednesday, seven Wednesdays before
Easter. Ash Wednesday is a day when we remember our mortality, our finite nature.
Our time on this earth is brief. The Psalmist says, "Men and women don't
live very long; like wildflowers they spring up and blossom, But a storm snuffs
them out just as quickly, leaving nothing to show they were here" (Psalms
103:15). Lent continues for 40 days (not
counting Sundays) moving through six weeks at the beginning of Spring to Holy
Week's Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, and concluding the Saturday before
Easter.
The 40 days of Lent were being observed by the early church
by the 4th century. Easter
was the primary celebration of the early church and a period of intense fasting
before the celebration of Easter was instituted very shortly after Jesus’ death
and resurrection. As time went on, that
time of fasting was lengthened. In the
early church, Lent became a time of preparation for those who were to be
baptized, a time of concentrated study and prayer before their baptism at the
Easter Vigil. Those who had become believers during the year were baptized
early Easter Sunday morning. As these new members were received into a living
community of faith, the entire community was called to preparation. This also
became a time when those who had been separated from the Church would prepare
to rejoin the community.
The number 40 is connected with many biblical events, but
especially with the 40 days Jesus spent in the wilderness preparing for his
ministry, overcoming temptations that could have led him to abandon his mission
and calling. Christians today use this period for introspection,
self-examination and repentance.
Why celebrate Lent as a Family?
At this time of year, preparations are being made all around
us for another growth cycle. The Earth
is warming and greening. New life is
beginning to bud and bloom. Why should it be any different within our
spiritual lives? Spiritual growth is more intentional than not. Jesus modeled
that spiritual growth involves spiritual disciplines.
Easter is on the calendar and Easter Day will come and go
whether we do any planning. However, Easter will not produce much spiritual
growth in us without preparation. We may find ourselves stooping down to peer
inside the empty tomb on Easter morning without a great deal of excitement or
awe, since we've heard the story so many times before, unless we prepare
ourselves for that morning and for the words of the angel: "He is not here
for he has risen, as he said. Come, see the place where he lay" (Matthew
28:6).
If a farmer misses the window to plant a crop, he will not
have time to reap a harvest. If we waste precious days or precious years, we
can't get them back. Lent reminds us to seize the moment. Make the season of
Lent an intentional season of growth. Make Lent a spiritual journey toward the
cross, and then you'll bend down and be in awe of the empty tomb. Easter will
be a day of celebration and not just another day!
Adapted for my purposes (with my biases and research but with borrowed verbiage) from “Explaining Lent to Non-Liturgical Christians” by Michael Helms (please click through to read his much-more-eloquent explanation).
I'd love to hear others who did or did not grow up celebrating Lent and how the season works (or doesn't) in your home!
I'd love to hear others who did or did not grow up celebrating Lent and how the season works (or doesn't) in your home!
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