Sexagesima Sunday marks nine weeks and (approximately) 60 days from Easter Sunday (April 17th this year). Sexagesima Week is also a very important element in the Apparitions of Mary Immaculate to Bernadette at Lourdes. It was on Thursday of Sexagesima Week, 1858 (February 11th) that Bernadette had her first vision of the beautiful young lady.
Lent will soon be upon us. A week from Wednesday is Ash Wednesday (March 2nd). Now is the time for us to be preparing our personal Lenten program for this year.
The outlines of good Lenten practice are given us by the Church for everybody who has reached the age of reason. Lent should be a time when we practice our Catholic Christian faith with extra effort. While it is certainly true that we should always be praying, always be offering up personal, hidden sacrifices as penances and means of self-discipline, and always be doing deeds of mercy through almsgiving and good works, nevertheless during Lent we should make extra effort to pray, to fast, and to give alms. During Lent we should make extra effort to purify our motives of any self-seeking or caring too much about what kind of a figure we cut in front of others.
And as we go on in life, our Lenten experience changes with us, doesn’t it? A young adult Catholic, for example, in the exuberance of vitality, may try something very ambitious in terms of fasting or spiritual reading. Parents of a growing family, however, may want to use the Lenten days as an opportunity to organize more family prayer and devotion. Mature senior Catholics may not have the strength for very austere Lenten practices anymore, but they have been well-seasoned by the trials of life and they can approach Lenten days with that perspective on the Mystery of the Cross which only “living life” can give you.
So, don’t approach Lent with a sense of dread—
”Oh no, hear we go again! Let’s just get through this! What am I going to give up this year?”
The Church’s Lent each year is likened to a “sacred spring”, a “ver sacrum”. Although we readily associate Lent with austerities and penitential practices— “giving things up”—its primary purpose is the renewal of the Christian soul, analogous to the ways in which the earth is prepped and cultivated for its future fruits in the later springtime and into harvest time. Seeing and feeling the world of nature coming alive again always lifts our spirits and gives us hope. Just so, approaching the Lenten Season as a “sacred spring” ought to lift our spirits as we think of the supernatural hope we have in Jesus Christ Our Lord.
Lent, our “sacred spring” is the chance for renewal, the chance to grow closer to Jesus Christ our Living Lord as Christians signed and sealed by the waters of Baptism.
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes Church
270 Elliot Street
Newton, MA 02464
USA
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