Season of Growth
Lent is late this year. Like spring, it is taking its time. But today is Ash Wednesday, so the 40 days have begun, the ecclesiastical season that prepares us for Easter with prayer, fasting and contemplation.
Somewhere along the way — it's been a few years ago now — I learned that "Lent" comes from the Anglo-Saxon word "lencten," meaning spring. The days are lengthening. It's harder to appreciate this when Ash Wednesday falls on February 13, as it did last year.
But this year it arrives on March 5. It's light outside as I type these words. And I decide to approach the season with less dread and more optimism. A bit more like Advent. As a moving toward rather than a dredging down. As a season of growth rather than self-denial.
Somewhere along the way — it's been a few years ago now — I learned that "Lent" comes from the Anglo-Saxon word "lencten," meaning spring. The days are lengthening. It's harder to appreciate this when Ash Wednesday falls on February 13, as it did last year.
But this year it arrives on March 5. It's light outside as I type these words. And I decide to approach the season with less dread and more optimism. A bit more like Advent. As a moving toward rather than a dredging down. As a season of growth rather than self-denial.
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