Dear Parishioners and Friends of St. Mary’s of the Lake:
The 3 traditional disciplines or practices of Lent are: PRAYING, FASTING and ALMSGIVING.
In this Pastoral Note, I’d like to draw your attention to Almsgiving, which is seen as any favor or good deeds, prompted by Christian charity, done to assist the poor and the needy.
ALMSGIVING (also known as Sharing or Works of Charity) naturally implies that a favor rendered is for the sake of Christ, who taught us, ‘whatever you did for one of these least brethren of mine, you did for me.’ (Matt 25:40). Do you still remember 7 corporal & 7 spiritual works of mercy? If not, will you look them up? In addition, I’d like to share with you what Pope Francis invites us to SEE various groups of people in terms of what works of charity we can do toward them. The excerpt below is taken from the Pope’s Homily at the beginning of Lent:
SEE the gestures that prevent the extinguishing of charity, that keep the flame of faith and hope alive. Look at faces alive with God’s tenderness and goodness working in our midst.
SEE the face of our families who continue striving, day by day, with great effort, in order to move forward in life, and who, despite many concerns and much hardship, are committed to making their homes a school of love.
SEE the faces of our children and young people filled with yearning for the future and hope, filled with ‘tomorrows’ and opportunities that demand dedication and
protection. Living shoots of love and life that always open up a path in the midst of our selfish and meager calculations.
SEE our elderly whose faces are marked by the passage of time, faces that reveal the living memory of our people. Faces that reflect God’s wisdom at work.
SEE the faces of our sick people and the many who take care of them; faces which in their vulnerability and service remind us that the value of each person can never be reduced to a question of calculation or utility.
SEE the remorseful faces of so many who try to repair their errors and mistakes, and who from their misfortune and suffering fight to transform their situations and move forward.
SEE and contemplate the face of Crucified Love, who today from the cross continues to bring us hope, his hand held out to those who feel crucified, who experience in their lives the burden of failure, disappointment and heartbreak.
SEE and contemplate the real face of Christ crucified out of love for everyone, without exception. For everyone? Yes, for everyone. To see his face is an invitation filled with hope for this Lenten time, in order to defeat the demons of distrust, apathy and resignation. The face that invites us to cry out: ‘THE KINGDOM OF GOD IS POSSIBLE!’
Fr. Philip