Open my eyes to what’s important

Imagine you are an archbishop going for a walk in a spacious cemetery. It’s a chilly Lenten day. You’re weary from a long day’s work, and haven’t even taken time to get out of your work clothes because of yet another meeting in the evening. Soon after you settle into a comfortable pace, a poorly dressed man walks in your direction. As he draws close to you, he stops. The next thing you know he’s thrusting a knife at your neck, demanding “money or your life.”

TudorspinuDreamstime.comTudorspinuDreamstime.comYour billfold’s at home. There’s no money to give. The assailant keeps insisting. Frightened out of your wits, you remember you stuck a snack in your pocket. You point to the candy bar and tell him it’s all you’ve got -- he can have it. At this suggestion, the man looks at you in utter disbelief and protests, “No way, Father. I don’t eat chocolate during Lent.”

I heard this story long ago about the late Archbishop Gerald Bergan of Omaha, Neb. I laughed heartily at its incongruity. But I also got the point, realizing in an instant how absurd my Lenten penances were: not eating candy, fasting to lose weight, giving up coffee, liquor or TV. Had these practices changed my attitudes and behavior? Not one iota. None of these had value in themselves when it came to spiritual renewal. Mostly they fed my hungry ego, so at Easter I felt proud satisfaction about my efforts at discipline.

Discipline and disciple have the same Latin root, discipulus, meaning “a learner.” Webster’s Dictionary defines discipline as “training that develops self-control, character, or orderliness and efficiency.” Discipline for the sake of discipline creates disciplinarians but doesn’t do much for changing one’s heart. Worthy Lenten restraint is practiced for the purpose of learning, of discovering what attitudes and behavior are to be changed in order to reflect the teachings of Christ.

For instance, we can discipline ourselves to keep quiet instead of having to be right, to not verbally slap back in response to hurtful remarks, to stop trying to show how wise we are. Closing our mouth is not enough, though. There also needs to be an opening of the barriers in our heart.

Lent most often is referred to as “a time of renewal.” I prefer “a period of recovery.” In A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose, Eckhart Tolle emphasizes: “You do not become good by trying to be good, but by finding the goodness that is already within you, and allowing that goodness to emerge. But it can only emerge if something fundamental changes in your state of consciousness.” Lent offers the opportunity to recover that goodness, to allow it to surface in thought, word and action.

Our state of consciousness gets blurred by the incredible pace of life as we hurry through days with packed schedules and pressures of our own or others’ expectations. “Open my eyes to what is really important, all those delicate movements of your presence that go unnoticed by me,” writes the mystic Evelyn Underhill. In other words, help me recover kindness, generosity, forgiveness, patience, understanding and other innate gifts of mine that get buried in constant family and work responsibilities. Guide me in sorting through the debris of self-preoccupation and cultural duplicity.

One of the most valuable Lenten disciplines involves a resurgence of faithfulness to daily prayer. As we quiet our mind and heart, we recover a state of consciousness in which we are once again aware of being united with the Holy One. This inward attention enables us to identify those hidden qualities of goodness that have gone astray. We learn again who we are, why we are, and restore what is of most value to our life.

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Prayer action suggestion:
Name your Lenten disciplines. How will they change your life?

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Thank you for your words of

Thank you for your words of wisdom. I will work at making them mine,

Wonderful!

Wonderful!

Dear Sister, Thank you!

Dear Sister,

Thank you! Struggled to even get ashes on my forehead today, I dread this time of the year. After reading your article it helped me. Yes to allowing myself to take time to pray and listen to what God is teaching me.

Thank you Sister Joyce, for

Thank you Sister Joyce, for such a wise and excellently focused reflection on the meaning of Lent...I look forward to your next piece. However I have more than enough to mull over (and practise) in your Ash Wednesday reflection. Be assured of a special place on the paten this week. (Fr.) Richard McCullen CM, Dublin, Ireland.

thank you, thank you... you

thank you, thank you... you always have the 'bon mot' to express what I find so antithetical to Grace in our catholic practice! I even had a dying patient call me on the phone the night before ash wednesday because she did not want to die without 'getting my ashes'!!

Sr. Joyce, Excellent article.

Sr. Joyce, Excellent article. I enjoyed it very much. We should all put this great advice into action. Thank you! Blessings this Lenten season.

Enjoyed this article to

Enjoyed this article to remind us of true discipline.

Very thoughtful and helpful,

Very thoughtful and helpful, Sister.

Thank you.

Steve Schulte
Los Angeles

Thank you Sr. Joyce. You have

Thank you Sr. Joyce. You have helped me enter into the season of Lent with more genuineness and purpose.

Thanks, Sister. A new way -

Thanks, Sister. A new way - 'to uncover' the goodness already in us. I am going to try with your prayers, and that of all these good people and my own of course. Blessings to you, Sister Joyce,

So good to hear her quote

So good to hear her quote Echart Tole about our innate goodness. I come from of the most ancient spiritual traditions here in the present United States the native American pueblo communities of Taos and Okayoweegeh here in New Mexico.We originally had no concepts of original sin or hell as a place of everlasting damnation until to was introduce/forced upon our ancestors four hundred years ago.

wonderfull indeed!

wonderfull indeed!

My own Lenten discipline is

My own Lenten discipline is to try and be less critical of others, especially those who are closest to me and believe you me, it is going to be hard work. Your words of wisdom, encouraging us to give more time to prayer really is the key to being able to see that whatever discipline we chose, it can only become a reality, through God's grace experienced through a deeper prayer life. Life then becomes a prayer. May the Lord give us all a hunger in our hearts to seek His presence through prayer, especially in the midst of the million things that seek our attention.

May God bless you all.
Yours in Christ
Marianne

How blessed you are with your

How blessed you are with your gift of words, lifting up others to bring God and his work into the world. We must all open our hearts to God's work rather than depriving ourselves of things we shouldn't have or do in the first place. God Bless.

Thank you.

Thank you.

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