I write this message while I am attending the third annual
Living Stones Partnership meeting held at the Circus Circus resort in Las
Vegas, Nevada. This is the annual meeting of the partnership of dioceses,
seminaries, individuals, and communities of faith interested in mutual/shared ministry.
Through the partnership, communities explore ways to assist and support persons
in discerning their gifts and then empowering them to use those gifts as God
and Christ are calling them to do. At its essence it is a matter of letting the
light of Christ shine forth, much like the focus of the Epiphany season’s Sunday
lectionary readings of recent weeks.
As I meet
with colleagues and friends in this city of bright lights and overstated
opulence, light and brightness surround me. Christ is right here, serving the
thousands of people who work very hard in the entertainment and hospitality
business, those who support those businesses, and the many who are suffering
from financial or other adversities.
But I
cannot escape the three-ring circus motif of where I am staying. It reminds me
greatly of the Lenten season that we enter in just a few short weeks. We leave
the season of light and begin the more penitential season of Lent. On Palm
Sunday, we read the Passion of Christ and begin our “red” Holy Week filled with
emotion and sadness. We immerse ourselves in the sadness of the Good Friday
wake, only to celebrate the Feast of the Resurrection three days later. Alleluia!
The alleluias are jarring after 40 alleluia-less days of personal reflection
and worship.
Yet, Lent is
not a season of calm. In many ways, it is a “three ring circus” of another
nature. Whether Lent begins in February or in March, we enter Lent in the midst
of uncertain weather patterns, posing its many risks for our friends and neighbors.
We devote additional time to shoveling, de-icing, and stoking wood, pellet and
coal stoves. We devote additional time to checking on friends and neighbors to
make sure that they are warm, safe and fed.
Theresa+