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Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Orthodox Practices |
GET REAL FOR LENT
By Fr. Stephen Freeman
Source:
https://blogs.ancientfaith.com |
According to St. Basil, God is the “only truly Existing.” Our
own existence is a gift from God who is our Creator. None of us has
“self-existing” life. We exist because God sustains us in existence – in
Him we live and move and have our being (Acts 17:28).
Sin is the rejection of this gift of God – a movement away from
true existence.
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Much of our attention in the modern world
is engaged seemingly with things that have no “true existence.” We
engage with illusions, with digital constructs. Our economy allows us to
escape the normal necessities such as seasonal scarcity or other mundane
concerns. We are increasingly removed from the very environment in which
we naturally live.
It is said that astronauts, after
spending a prolonged time in space, have lingering effects of
zero-gravity. Our bodies are made for gravity and require its constant
pull for everything from muscle tone to bone density. But we now live in
situations in which many forms of natural “gravity” have been reduced or
removed. What effect does the long-term ability to have almost any food
at any time of year have on the human body? As someone who has spent the
better part of my life at a desk, I can attest to the effect of a
sedentary existence. My lower back, my range of motion, the flexibility
of my joints are all consistent with the modern white-collar worker.
What effect do such things have on the
soul? For the soul requires “gravity” as well. Plato stated in his
Republic, that all children should learn to play a musical instrument
because music was required for the right development of the soul. We
give far too little thought to such things, assuming that no matter what
environment we live in, our inherent freedom of choice remains unscathed
and we can always decide to do something different, or be something
different.
I could decide to run a marathon
tomorrow, but I know that the first quarter-mile would leave me gasping
for breath and exhausted. You cannot go from 40 years at a desk to the
demands of a marathon – just
because you choose to do so.
And so we come to Great Lent.
Some see this season of the year as a
spiritual marathon. They rise from their sedentary spiritual lives, set
off in a sprint and fail before the first week is out. The failure comes
in anger, self-recrimination, even despondency.
The first year that I “chose” to fast in
the Orthodox manner (it was 4 years before I was received into the
Church), the priest I discussed the fast with said, “You can’t keep the
fast.” I argued with him until I realized his wisdom.
“Do something easier,” he told me. “Just
give up red meat.”
“What about chicken?” I asked.
“Nope. Eat chicken. Eat everything except
beef and pork. And pray a little more.”
And so I returned to my Anglican life, a
little disappointed that my zeal had made such a poor impression. But my
family accepted the proposal and we ate no red meat for Lent. It was, in
hindsight, the best Lent my family had ever had. No longer were we
musing over “what to give up for Lent,” and instead accepted a
discipline that was given to us.
In subsequent years that same priest (who
is now my godfather) increased the discipline. And we were ready for it.
It is interesting to me, however, that my first experience of an
Orthodox fast was being told not to be so strict. The “strict” part was
learning to do what I was told. That is sometimes the most difficult
fast of all.
Lent is a time to “get real.” Not eating
some things is actually normal. In our modern world we have to embrace a
natural “gravity” that we could easily leave behind – at least, we have
to do this if we want to avoid an atrophy of the soul.
In 2000, the average American ate 180
pounds of meat a year (and 15 pounds of fish and shellfish). That was
roughly a third more than in 1959. Scarcity is not an issue in our diet.
Our abundance is simply “not real,” and the environment frequently shows
the marks of the artificial nature of our food supply. But we have no
way of studying what is going on with our souls. What I know to be true
is that – as goes the body – so goes the soul. Those who engage the
world as consumer are being consumed by the world to an equal measure.
And so we get real.
Getting real means accepting limits and
boundaries. Our culture is a bubble of make-believe. It rests on an
economy of over-consumption. The crash of 2008 came close to a much
greater disaster and could have easily gone into free-fall. Many fail to
understand just how fragile our lives truly are. In the season of Lent
(and on all the fasting days of the year) we embrace the fragility of
our lives. We allow the world to say “no” and take on extra burdens and
duties. It is worth keeping in mind that such things do not make us
spiritual heroes, first they have to make us human
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Article created: 24-02-2018.
Updated on: 24-02-2018.