Will Lent Never End?

Each year, as the Lenten season arrives, I try to think of a theme or image that expresses the feelings we bring into the season. Wilderness, valleys, journeys, and deserts are often images that I imagine for the season. 

This year it might be that Lent feels like we are being pushed off a cliff, or all alone in a world of threatening danger. Which is saying something, given what the world has been through in the past few years. 

The threats that we are navigating globally and locally are both nothing new for this world of ours and also more intense than the dangers that most of us have had to deal with in our lifetimes before 2020. 

We arrive at this Lenten season already tender and aching, still traumatized from the pandemic, from ongoing wars in Ukraine and then Gaza, and then have had to contend with the consequences of an incomprehensible trade war with our closest neighbour and ally that may very directly impact our lives as Canadians. There are many personal and familial wildernesses that many of us have been wandering as well. This wilderness is going to form into something new and different than what we are now. 

Many of these wilderness journeys are ones we have been in on for years as communities of faith, as Manitobans, Canadians and people living in the world in 2025. Having been walking in the wilderness for as long as we have, our destination remains unclear. What is around the next corner is unclear. Our wilderness vision is foggy and opaque. 

We have begun looking at the Catechism in these past months and there is a very Lenten reason for it. In the early Church, the Lenten season was the one during which new converts to Christianity were taught the faith in preparation for their baptism which would happen at the Easter Vigil. Often, baptized Christians would join in this catechetical experience in Lent. Bishops and priests took this time to teach the mysteries of faith to these new converts preparing to be baptized. What are these mysteries of faith? The Creed, the Lord’s Prayer and the Ten Commandments. These, along with the Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper, are the main topics in the Catechism. 

So in this Lenten wilderness where we find ourselves this year, there is a reminder passed on to us from the saints who have gone before us. When we cannot see what comes next, and when our vision and pathway forward is hard to see, we cling to the promises and truths found in these mysteries of faith. God is calling us to remember our Baptismal identity. In the Commandments, we hear the Law that declares that we are sinners on our way to death. In the Creed, we hear the Gospel promise that God in Christ was sent to save sinners through the Holy Spirit. In the Lord’s Prayer, we are given a faith to live out in community with our siblings in Christ. 

These Baptismal mysteries ground us in things that truly matter, with truths big enough to confront the threats and dangers around us. Suddenly, the wilderness feels less daunting and overwhelming.  Knowing where we might end up at the end of our journey feels less anxiety-producing when we are reminded of God’s claim on us, that the One who has already brought us out of the waters from death to life will not abandon us in the wilderness either.

So as we begin this very Lenty Lent, let us remember that we are God’s, and that God has already promised us life on the other side. 

One thought on “Will Lent Never End?”

  1. Hi Erik –

    Thanks for this – naming the reality of what is going on, with a hope for tomorrow.

    Appreciate the message.

    Peace,

    Kathryn.

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