“Welcome, dear feast of Lent”

“Welcome, dear feast of Lent”

“Welcome, dear feast of Lent,” wrote George Herbert in a poem on the subject.  Of course, it is not a feast but a fast.  But I know what Herbert means.  Lent, even when celebrated by fasting, gives us lots to feast upon.

I love Lent, which begins today.  I get so tired of my constant self-indulgence.  It really is a form of bondage.  I find Lent strangely liberating.  I don’t do any grand renunciations or meritorious deeds.  Maybe I can work up to those some year.  Right now I just watch what I eat and exercise.  All I do is live more healthily than I usually do.  I can do that for 46 days.  And usually I can carry over a few good habits into the rest of the year.  But saying “no” to myself–not eating the empty carbs even though I’m hungry; keep walking even though my muscles start to ache–is good for me on many levels.

Oh, another thing I do is start some challenging reading project.  This year I am reading  J. G. Hamann.  (More on him later.)

Do you have any Lenten observances that you have found helpful?

"Actually with 3 times as many registered Dems as Reps the Congressional districts are all ..."

Monday Miscellany, 5/11/26
"That is not an attitude that I have run across, so I have to imagine ..."

The Social Imaginary of Our Secular ..."
"The social imaginary plays in the background, implicitly and explicitly, unsaid, generally without our awares. ..."

The Social Imaginary of Our Secular ..."
"The attitude which I find the most perplexing is one that could be characterized as ..."

The Social Imaginary of Our Secular ..."

Browse Our Archives

Follow Us!


TAKE THE
Religious Wisdom Quiz

What does "Nebuchadnezzar" mean in Akkadian?

Select your answer to see how you score.