Brothers and sisters,
Planning for this month has been a challenge for me. It hasn’t been because of any particular kind of stress or worry or anything. Instead, I’ve been combining March 29th and April 5th in my head. The transition from March to April during Holy Week is throwing me off. And so I have to keep reminding myself that, outside of Palm Sunday, none of the Holy Week activities start till April—which is closer than I think, but also not that much closer. It’s this weird sense of almost rushing to Easter.
It does not help my sense of rush and hurry that we’ve had such beautiful spring days of late. The sunshine. The mild temperatures. The flowers blooming. It makes me yearn for spring and summer. I’m done with the cold and the wet and the grey of winter. I’m ready to move on to the good stuff!
Now according to the church calendar, by the time this article comes out we will be over halfway through Lent. We will finally be closer to Easter than Ash Wednesday. Lent is forty days (not counting Sundays), meaning Friday, March 13th will be the 21st day of the season. And there is a natural inclination to want to rush to the end. For three weeks we’ve reflected on sin and confession and repentance. Let’s get on to the resurrection and grace and hope! But there’s an issue with that impulse.
I had a theology professor who used to remind us that Christians often get too focused on one part of the Easter story. On the one hand, Christians can get too focused on the crucifixion, leaning into the idea of the pain and suffering of Jesus, on the sin and brokenness of humanity. They linger there too long and the resurrection becomes almost an after-thought. On the other hand, Christians can get too focused on the resurrection, rushing past the cross because it makes us uncomfortable and leaning into the fact that sin and death have no power over Jesus.
What my professor advocated for was simple: acknowledge the importance of each step along the way. Jesus’ life and ministry are important—it is good to spend time reading about them and dwelling there a while. But we must recognize that those miracles and those teachings led Jesus to the cross—it is good to spend time reading about that terrible event and dwelling there a while. But we must remember that the story does not end with the cross, that it leads to the first Easter Sunday—it is good to spend time reading those stories and dwelling there a while. We should not rush any of them.
So as we move through these final twenty days of Lent, let us not rush ahead to Easter Sunday. Let us spend some time contemplating our sins. Then, let us spend some time remembering the cross. Then, let us spend some time celebrating the resurrection! We should not try to combine March 29th and April 5th. We should not rush the end of winter because we’re ready for spring. Let us take these seasons as God intended, recognizing the value in each of them.
Grace and peace,
Pastor Ben

