Sermon
Is not this the fast that I have chosen? to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the
heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed to free, and that ye break every yoke?
It is to some extent because of passages like this that our churches have not been
particularly rigorous about the observation of Lent. In the Gospels, the Lord is portrayed
as challenging the practice of fasting for its own sake. The formal giving up of
something, apparently just for the sake of giving it up, does not seem to make much sense,
especially if it is done with the avowed intent of resuming our old ways as soon as Lent
is over. At best, it might serve as a kind of moral weight training regimen. The world is
not noticeably improved by lifting the weights and setting them down again, but we do
build up muscle that can be used in more constructive ways.
We do not, though, need to throw out the baby with the bath. If Lent is often used for the
kind of fast Isaiah criticized, that does not mean it must be totally disregarded. We
could try to use it for the kind of fast we believe the Lord has chosen. We could use it,
that is, as a time to accomplish something for our world that we have been avoiding or
postponing. It could be the time when we write the letter we have been postponing or send
the check to the cause we believe in, when we actually take some items to the Salvation
Army or Goodwill Industries, or when we answer a call for volunteers.
The advantage Lent offers for this kind of effort is that Lent is a defined period of
time. We are not signing on for life. Nothing says we cannot continue after Easter, but
nothing says we must. If we do not continue, that does not lessen the worth of what we
have done. If we decide we like it more than we expected, and do keep on with our effort,
so much the better.
Perhaps, though, we should face the fact that at least in this part of the world, not
everything is on our side at this time of year. About now, it is likely to seem as though
we have had enough of winter. Not too far from here, the first crocus tips are showing,
but we are well aware that there are still cold weeks ahead. For many, this is a time when
we just try to hang in there and meet our normal responsibilities with reasonable grace.
It may not seem "reasonable" to undertake something extra.
Helen Keller, though, offers us a thought to the contrary. I won't take the time to give
you the whole quotation, but basically she says that her remedy for depression is to do
something for someone else--". . . to make the light on others' eyes my sun, the music in
others' ears my symphony, the smile on others' lips my happiness." The tail end of winter
can be an open invitation to self-pity, and the surest way out of self-pity is
constructive activity.
Time after time, when people are asked late in life what they would do differently if they
had life to live over again, they come up with the same answer: "I would spend more time
with the people I care about." Often when someone dies, we find ourselves wishing we had
done more or said more, troubled that we were always a little too busy with something
else, always letting ourselves believe that there would be more time tomorrow or next week
or next month. Lent could be our time to break free of these pretenses for a while.
Whatever special course of action we choose, it would be good for us, I believe, to try to
make Lent a special time. There has been a huge risk in our past ignoring of it. The risk
has been that we wind up feeling superior to the unenlightened people who "keep a fast
that the Lord has not chosen," that we see ourselves as people who know better. This is
simply faith alone in one particular guise, equating knowledge with virtue. Perhaps we do
"know better"--that does not mean that we are better.
In fact, if we wind up thinking that we have no need of repentance, we are in real
trouble. It would be far better for us to join with the rest of the Christian world and
acknowledge our continuing need for self-discipline. It would be far better for us to be
able to see ourselves as in the same boat as the Catholic, as sharing the experience of
imperfection. Of course there are differences between us, differences in belief and in
practice, but we share a profound humanness. Our own efforts in times of difficulty could
be strengthened by the sense that others are with us in spirit.
Our doctrines are quite clear--"Repentance is the first thing of the church within us"
(True Christian Religion 510). Even more striking is the statement that "Anyone who is
leading a life of faith is performing repentance daily; for this involves reflecting on
our evils, acknowledging them, and asking the Lord for help . . ." (Arcana Coelestia
8391). Swedenborg is talking about a kind of daily taking stock, looking at the particular
ways in which we have fallen short.
It is important that this be done with a view to actual improvement. There is no virtue in
wallowing in guilt or self-blame. It is to be hoped that we can step far enough back from
ourselves to look at our words and deeds with some detachment, accepting our weaknesses as
matters of fact, as clear indications of our need for divine help. We are also told very
clearly, incidentally, that nothing much is going to happen if we ask for help without
making any effort to help ourselves. We need to learn the limits of our strength, and we
will not discover what those limits are unless we exert ourselves.
It may help to look at it this way. Each of us has particular gifts to bring to the human
community. That is how heaven works, by bringing together different gifts into a
harmonious whole. But if this is to happen, we must also have different needs. My gifts
must be needed by you, and yours by me. Anyone who was self-sufficient would have no need
of others and therefore no place in heaven. Our imperfections, so to speak, can be
wonderful bonds between us.
All of us, I suspect, could think of times when we hesitated to admit some fault because
we were afraid that people would reject us. All of us, I suspect, could also think of
times when we have moved past that hesitation, and have found to our surprise that people
came closer to us. We may not realize it, but by our reticence to admit weakness, we can
give the impression of thinking we have no faults.
Nothing is further from our intent. We ourselves know perfectly well how far from
perfection we are, and it is that huge distance we are trying to keep others from
discovering. One particular instance comes to mind of an individual who seemed especially
dogmatic, who seemed to feel that he had all the answers. In one quite tense situation, he
blurted out that he was struggling to make sense of things, and everyone's attitude toward
him changed. We know in theory that the people who seem most positive are often covering
up the most uncertainty, but we may not be aware of this in the course of an actual
conversation.
When I was in graduate school, the was one fellow student whom we all came to love dearly.
He had no qualms about admitting his ignorance. If a professor assumed that he knew
something and he did not, he would ask. The rest of us were more likely to pretend we
knew, and then look things up after class, which is probably what the professors expected.
It was probably what they themselves had done in their student days. There was little
question, though, that classes made more sense when we were able to follow what was being
presented, when we did not have to take cryptic notes and figure them out later.
Unquestionably too, the faculty had a great deal of respect for this student who was so
focused on learning that he did not care what kind of image he was presenting.
Sometimes it seems as though our culture has placed such a high value on self-sufficiency
that it is a sin to admit any kind of inadequacy. We would be far better off if we could
admit the obvious, namely that we need others and that they need us. We could then focus
the human side of our Lenten practice on two simple questions: "What do I need?" and "What
do others need from me?" For this period of time, we could resolve to ask for help in some
specific regard, and to offer help in some specific regard, trying especially to ask from
people who have shown a willingness to give, and to offer where we see a genuine need.
It does not have to be anything great. "Would you ask me next week whether I have balanced
my checkbook? I have trouble making myself sit down and do it." "Would you like to get out
of the house more, and is there something we could do together next week?" Within a
family, there are often little shifts in responsibility that can make a significant
difference--you help me with this and I'll help you with that.
As we engage more thoughtfully in asking for and offering help in our relationships with
each other, we begin to discover deeper needs. We cannot offer each other affection and
understanding unless we are receiving and accepting affection and understanding within
ourselves, from the Lord. We find obstacles to that reception within ourselves, obstacles
that we cannot budge with our own strength. This is where the vertical dimension of
repentance comes in--the admission of our specific needs. We are not turning to the Lord
as sinners expecting punishment, but as faulty creatures needing help and healing.
Of course we have needs. Of course other people do, too. Can we use Lent as a time when we
try facing this a little more squarely than we usually do? Then it may turn out to be not
just a kind of moral exercise, but a venture into a more rewarding way of living.
Amen.