Friday, February 28, 2020

Friday after Ash Wednesday 2020 - Fasting with Sincerity

Throughout the Gospels the Lord is consistently criticizing the religious practices of the Pharisees. On Ash Wednesday, the Lord challenged the prayer, fasting, and almsgiving of the Pharisees. They love to pray in order get attention and appear to be pious, all the while their hearts are far from God. They take on a gloomy disposition that they may appear to be fasting. They make a big public spectacle about their almsgiving, that they may appear to be generous.

But the Lord criticizes this purely external and self-serving form of religion. Christians on the other hand are seek to please God in our prayer, fasting, and almsgiving, by not just completing these activities, but doing so with the right spirit, the right intention and motivations. We aren’t simply to seek the appearance of holiness, for God sees to the heart. We are to engage in prayer, fasting, and almsgiving out of true love for God and love of neighbor.

In his criticisms of Pharisaical religion, the Lord echoed the prophets, like Isaiah in our reading today. Isaiah denounced the Jews of his day who fasted but whose lack of love for God and neighbor could be evidenced in how they treated people: in their quarreling, fighting, mistreatment of servants, failure to heed the call of the starving.


We are called to fast, but fasting which flows from and increases our practice of justice, righteousness, loving-kindness, and attentiveness to the needs of the poor.

Lent aims to deepen our sense and practice of right worship, stripping away our selfish motives, purifying our hearts of indifference--as our Collect today prays, that our Lenten observances may be accomplished with sincerity.

“The days are coming when my disciples will fast” the Lord says in the Gospel. Yes, and the days are here. But our fasting must be done in the right spirit, or it’s no different from the Pharisees.
Each day during Lenten, we do well to ensure that our fasting, prayers, and almsgiving our being done with the right motivation, to please God, to increase our love and selflessness, for the glory of God and salvation of souls.

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For the whole Christian people, that in this sacred Lenten season, they may be more abundantly nourished by every word that comes from the mouth of God.

For the whole world, that in lasting tranquility and peace our days may truly become the acceptable time of grace and salvation.

For sinners and those who neglect right religion, that in this time of reconciliation they may return wholeheartedly to Christ.

For ourselves, that God may at last stir up in our hearts aversion for our sins and conviction for the Gospel.

For all who have died, and for all the poor souls in purgatory, and for X. for whom this Mass is offered.

Grant, we pray, O Lord, that your people may turn to you with all their heart, so that whatever they dare to ask in fitting prayer they may receive by your mercy. Through Christ Our Lord.

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