The second preface of Lent (we can get into what is a preface at Mass at some other time, in short, it is the prayer offered by the priest just prior to the Sanctus), which has the theme of Spiritual penance has this penetrating insight to offer us:
For you have given your children a sacred time
for the renewing and purifying of their hearts,
that, freed from disordered affections [italicized emphasis mine],
they may so deal with the things of this passing world
so to hold rather to the things that eternally endure.
Disordered affections, this is precisely what St. Paul is getting at in his letter to the Philippians, which we read today, on Passion Sunday, when he says:
Brothers and sisters:
I consider everything as a loss
because of the supreme good of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.
For his sake I have accepted the loss of all things
and I consider them so much rubbish,
that I may gain Christ and be found in him
Brothers and sisters, this attitude of St. Paul, is the attitude that we should adopt during our Lenten fasts and abstinence. We fast and abstain from things because we recognize that at some level these things that we otherwise hold affection for – whether chocolate, or alcohol, or films and television, music, or parties, are all disordered. They are disordered, because it followed mindlessly, they do not lead us toward Christ, but away from Him. When we give up these things for Lent therefore, our attitude ought not to be to wait for the forty days so that we can just go back to them with gusto, but to realise that, in fact, we can live without them! Living without them may open up one more way in which we can draw ourselves closer to Christ by learning to live without the things of this world and live with the one thing that gives us (eternal) life; Our Lord Jesus Christ. In other words, and to go back to second preface, the point of Lenten abstinences is that we may be freed from disordered affections.
One of the features of contemporary life is to mistake the object of our affections, and the sentiments that we feel when in the presence of these objects, as the reason for our living. To repurpose a silly line from a TV comedy, St. Paul says wrong! Accept the loss of all things that keep you from Christ, accept them as so much rubbish, and you will be well on the way towards the goal of the Christian life. In other words, order your life to Christ and His Cross, and you will win!
St. Paul can sometimes use strikingly contemporary language when he speaks about the Christian life. Take, for example, these words in his letter to the Corinthians (9: 24-27) that those of us involved with healthy lifestyles, exercising and the gym, will readily get:
Do you not know that in a race the runners all compete, but only one receives the prize? Run in such a way that you may win it. Athletes exercise self-control in all things; they do it to receive a perishable wreath, but we an imperishable one. So I do not run aimlessly, nor do I box as though beating the air; but I punish my body and enslave it, so that after proclaiming to others I myself should not be disqualified.
The Lenten fasts and abstinences are spiritual exercises so that we can limber up for the race toward the final prize. They are merely the warmup, so that the following Lent we can do better, and then the following year even better. As someone who has lived, and loved, the fast life, may I suggest to you, that as you take up these fasts and abstinences, your life opens up to the beauty of other things are more ordered towards Christ.
There will be many of you who will have started Lent with determination and verve and are now tired and have fallen away from your fasts. Buck up! So you’ve slacked off! No matter! Pick yourself up and get back with the programme! Some of you may not have started at all! No matter! There is someone I know who would start late, but his fasts would get more and more rigorous as he approached Good Friday. This could be you too! As the Gospel acclamation reminds us:
Even now, says the Lord,
return to me with your whole heart;
for I am gracious and merciful.
Even now, says the Lord! Bretheren, I leave you with the first verse of a beautiful hymn written in the fifth century, which you could well turn into a personal prayer, and even sing it, for the remainder of Lent;
Lord Jesus think on me
and purge away my sin,
from earthly passions set me free,
and make me pure within.
May you have a blessed Passiontide.
(Image reference: Adoration of the True Cross by St Helena and the Emperor Heraclius, Jimenez Bernalt, 1480s, Saragossa Museum).