Lent: Walking on the Downslope of God

Lent: Walking on the Downslope of God 2025-03-16T07:27:13-04:00

Iโ€™ve made a big deal over the dozen-plus years of this blogโ€™s existence of why Lent is my least favorite liturgical season. How I washed the ashes off my forehead immediately after leaving my first Ash Wednesday service in my twenties. How Lent often turns into a season of performance artโ€“look how holy I can be for 40 days. But not this yearโ€“Lent seems very appropriate this time around.

In a recent episode of her podcast โ€œEverything Happens,โ€ Kate Bowler described Lent as โ€œthe season for losers.โ€ If you wonder why things seldom if ever work out in the way they would have worked out ifย you were in charge, Lent is your season. If you suspect that a life of faith seeking to follow Jesus and the American story of success if you work hard might not be compatible, sink into the reflection and honesty of Lent.

A student told me a couple of weeks ago that she strongly believes in the platitude that โ€œeverything happens for a reasonโ€ (she didnโ€™t call it a platitude). When asked, I would guess that 75% of any of my classes in any year would agree that this statement is true. Ah, the innocence of 18-22 years olds.

If is, of course, easy after the fact to come up with a revisionist story of how a painful or destructive event actually turned out to be a good thing. There is a certain comfort in believing that we live in a universe in which everything does indeed work out for good. And, of course, everythingย does have a cause. But the โ€œreasonโ€ in the platitude has moral importโ€“it means โ€œreasonโ€ as in โ€œmakes sense.โ€ And the more years one has under oneโ€™s belt, the more one learns that sometimes, shit happens. There is no sense, there is no reason, there is no redmption. Lent is the season that invites us to stop avoiding and start inhabiting, as Kate Bowler says, โ€œA Lent for Real Life.โ€ In her podcast, she says that

For the next 40 days, we walk together on the downslope of God. And yes, Easter is coming. Hope will be realized. The lovely part is going to come true, but weโ€™re not going to skip ahead. This is the season that asks us to stop pretending weโ€™re holding it all together. It is a time to pause, to sit with whatโ€™s fragile and unfinished, and let God meet us in the hardest parts of our lives

If you have been finding it more and more difficult to make even a shred of sense of whatโ€™s happening around you, go ahead and sink into Lent. Donโ€™t let anyone talk you out of the conviction that things arenโ€™t working out in the way that any reasonable divine being would approve of. Perhaps you will resonate with this song by Katelyn Tarverโ€“let it be your Lenten anthem.

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