
WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF GREAT LENT?

It is very
natural to wonder what is the reason and purpose for all the things associated
with Great Lent — the fasting, the extra Services, going to Confession and
receiving Communion, asking forgiveness, giving alms, doing more praying and
reading the Bible and other spiritual reading, and helping others more, and the
whole experience of Great Lent. Many might wonder, why
do we subject ourselves to all these things anyway?
There are a
number of reasons, but the most significant one is simply that we need it!
The everyday stresses and pressures of a very corrupt and godless world around
us has such a great influence on us that we frequently don’t even notice how far
away we have wandered from being the kind of person and living the kind of life
that the Lord expects of us. Usually this doesn’t happen overnight or suddenly —
it is gradual. That is why the image of us wandering away like sheep is very
valid. A sheep has his head to the ground, nibbling away on the grass and he
just keeps going, following his nose as he eats the grass. Then he might look up
after a while and suddenly he discovers he has wandered away from his flock, and
has gotten lost. This is really our condition as human beings — we nibble away a
little at a time in our daily routine of working, eating, sleeping, playing,
etc. and don’t realize that we are getting lost. Sometimes we have gotten so
lost, we don’t even realize how lost we are, especially if we encounter other
lost sheep, who think that being lost is the normal, natural way of living.
So we need this
annual Great Lenten opportunity to try to return to our flock—the beloved people
of God, the Body of Christ. Great Lent provides this opportunity, when we are
also preparing ourselves to be crucified with Christ so that we may be
resurrected with Him. One theme of Great Lent is that we are in exile in this
life, and that our true home is with God in His Kingdom, and that we must return
as the prodigal son or daughter to our heavenly Father. But it takes a conscious
effort and decision to return and get our priorities straight. After all, what
really is important in life—what are our priorities? What the world around us
tells us is important is the polar opposite of what God tells us is important.
If during this special holy season of Great Lent, it is life as usual, we are
missing the opportunity of getting our lives straightened out. When our
priorities are messed up and we become lost sheep, then nothing works out right:
we get depressed, discouraged, sick; we get used to sin and think that sin is
normal, and that virtue is abnormal, and things just go wrong. So now we have
the opportunity to get ourselves straightened out and to build up our
relationship with God, without which life is a living garbage dump.
So we can make a
free choice: life as usual, or get back on the right path and stop making
excuses of why we should not to go to church and Confession and Communion, why
not to pray nor make God’s priorities our priorities. We are free to choose the
path of joy in God, or misery on the garbage heap of the world.
