Here is the Lenten letter from the Latin Patriarch
of Jerusalem, Fouad Twal:
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, “Grace and
peace be with you all!”
1. We read in the Gospel that “Jesus fasted
for forty days and forty nights.” (Mt 4:2)
This fast very likely took place in the desert
region four kilometers northwest of Jericho, on a mountain named “Quarantena”
(or Quruntul in Arabic). In the 12th century, the mountain belonged to the
Latin Canons of the Holy Sepulcher, and was inhabited by a group of clerics
named the Brothers of the Forty Days.
Once more, our Church of Jerusalem may speak
not only about history, but also of the geography and the topography of
Salvation. This site, not far from Jordan, is a place of
2. A fast which the Lord did not need!
In theory Jesus could have miraculously
dispensed with food; but “he had to become like his brothers” and sisters -
other men, and “has similarly been tested in every way, yet without sin.”
(Heb 4:15) Neither his fast, nor even his baptism from John, satisfied any kind
of personal necessity. In contrast, penance, fasting, reconciliation, with
prayer and almsgiving are indispensable for us for the atonement of our own
sins. However, there is an essential difference: we have in the fast of our
Lord, a magnificent example for ourselves. We cannot fast for forty days and
forty nights “without anything to eat;” but during Lent the Church undertakes
to re-enact the time passed by Christ in the desert in prayer and fasting. The
intention of the Church is clear: “to imitate Christ” (1 Cor 11:2) who “wished
to serve as an example,” not only in the washing of one another’s feet (Jn
13:15) but also in every other domain. (Phil 2:5)
Our fast intends to imitate that of Christ,
who himself followed the example of Moses who fasted forty days before
receiving the tablets of the Commandments. (Ex 34: 28-29) Elijah also fasted
for forty days before his encounter with the Lord on Horeb. (1 Kgs 19:8) During
the transfiguration of our Lord on Mount Tabor, it was precisely these two
figures, who had fasted forty days, who appeared beside the Messiah in glory.
3. A “preventive” and atoning fast
In his 2009 Lenten message, Pope Benedict XVI
raised the question of what value and sense there might be for us Christians
today, in depriving ourselves of food and drink, both being necessities for our
health and survival. He responded with support from Holy Scripture and
Christian Tradition that a fast is an important undertaking for the avoidance
of sin and all that might lead us to it.
In his Lenten message for 2011, the Pope
denounced greed, as if men wanted to “devour the world.” He stated, “we are
often faced with the temptation of accumulating and love of money that
undermine God’s primacy in our lives.” In 2008, he courageously said:
“According to the teaching of the Gospel, we are not owners but rather
administrators of the goods we possess: these, then, are not to be considered
as our exclusive possession, but means through which the Lord calls each one of
us to act as a steward of His providence for our neighbor.” Through this
sharing and in communion, we live as in the early Church of Jerusalem.
(“Apostolic Life” of the Early Christians in Acts 2 and 4; 2 Cor 8 and 9) The
beloved apostle, John, wrote with severity: “If someone who has worldly means
sees a brother in need and refuses him compassion, how can the love of God
remain in him? (1 Jn 3:17)
The Holy Father’s Message for Lent this year
takes the theme: “Let us be concerned for each other, to stir a response in
love and good works.” (Heb 10:24) Pope Benedict stated that, “Christians can
also express their membership in the one body which is the Church through
concrete concern for the poorest of the poor. Concern for one another likewise
means acknowledging the good that the Lord is doing in others and giving thanks
for the wonders of grace that Almighty God in his goodness continuously
accomplishes in his children.”
For us sinners, mortals constantly confronted
with our failures, fasting is an effective way to demonstrate our repentance
and the desire to set right our failings. “It was in this way that after
Jonah’s warning, through penance and fasting the Ninevites avoided God’s wrath
and were granted His mercy.” (Jonah 3:10)
Jesus gives us a framework for fasting and
almsgiving: that they are to be carried out secretly and discretely, without
pretension, (Mt 6: 3-4) showing outwardly neither misery nor mortification. (Mt
6:16) This does not in any way contradict the public and communal character of
these practices in the Church, but rather is necessary to spurn individual
excess and caprice.
Later, Jesus will expound on the Christian
fast, in contrast with that of the Pharisees and the disciples of John:
Christians, as relatives of the Bridegroom, “will fast in those days [when He
is taken away from them]” and raised on the Cross. (Mk 2: 19-20)
This is why the first Christians fasted during
the holy Triduum. Subsequently, they fasted every Wednesday and Friday. (The
Didache, Ch. 8)
Penance is a healthy practice. Indeed, it
calls for a healthy attitude, which is a “return” to the Lord and to His
goodness; a return “to the Father” like the prodigal son. (cf Lk 15) In fact,
the verb “toubou” in Aramaic and Arabic means “Return.” This call by the
Baptist and the Savior is significant. It is there, near the Jordan River
and the rest of this desert region, where the presence of God is marked in the
emptiness and splendor of nature!
4. A fast of conversion of persons and peoples
In the tradition of the Church, Lent is a
preparation for the Easter Triduum, the “days during which the Bridegroom will
be taken away from among us,” (Mt 9:15) and raised on the Cross.
Lent is a forty-day journey, symbolically
representing the forty years of the Hebrew people in the desert – it is a call:
a) To meditate on the mystery of the Cross,
that we might conform ourselves to the death of Jesus, (cf Rom 6:5) in light of
a radical change in our lives;
b) To be docile to the action of the Holy
Spirit, who will transform us, as he transformed Saul of Tarsus on the road to
Damascus;
c) To adapt our lives with determination to
the will of God, freeing ourselves from any egoism, lust for power, or avarice,
by opening our hearts to the love of Christ and neighbor, especially the poor
and indigent. Lent, as the Holy Father reminds us, is a providential time for
us to recognize our frailty and welcome reconciliation, in order to orient
ourselves to Christ.
Lent this year is between two Episcopal Synods
of extreme importance. The first was the Special Assembly for the Middle
East in October 2010, and the next in October this year, for the New
Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian Faith. As with ecumenism
which aims at reconciliation in light of the unity of Christians, it is “the
conversion of the heart” which, by the grace of God, is the key to seemingly
impenetrable problems and the end to ostensibly ceaseless and irreparable
hostilities. This conversion rests on the understanding that “man does not live
on bread alone but by every word that comes forth from the mouth of God,” (Mt.
4: 4) that “the flesh [alone] is of no use,” and one must “watch and pray that
you may not undergo the test.” (Mt. 26:41) In this case, fasting is an
excellent antidote to the many excesses of every day.
Is this not a great time for the people of our
region, constantly in conflict, to “return” to the Lord, by the application of
the Ten Commandments, especially the respect for life, for property, and for
human rights? Would the solution not be in a “metanoia,” in upheaval, in
radical change, whereby the good of the nations supersedes the interests of
some leaders and authorities to the detriment of their people?
5. A fast in a time of crisis
In the midst of difficulty and adversity, we
must act with wisdom while helping one another. Pope Benedict has stated
without hesitation from the advent of the global financial crisis that, those
who construct on money build on sand. The Holy Father on several occasions
has underlined that the fundamental crisis is one of values and ethics,
following a crisis of faith.
6. Our fast: a means not an end
We do not fast simply to fast. We fast to
imitate Christ, to be conscious of those who hunger and thirst. As proclaimed
by the fourth Preface for Lent: “For through bodily fasting you restrain our
faults, raise up our minds, and bestow both virtue and its rewards, through
Christ our lord.”
7. Fast for peace
In the Holy Land and throughout the Middle
East, we continue to suffer from violence and conflict. Peace is one of the
greatest graces that the Lord gives to humanity. With the birth of the Saviour,
who is Peace incarnate, in Bethlehem-Ephratha, (Mic 5:1, 5) the angels sang
“peace to those on whom His favor rests.” (Lk 2:14) The Lord asks us to work
for peace, and if we achieve it, He commends us with compassion and gentleness.
(Beatitudes, Mt 5:3,9) Before his Passion, he declared to his disciples: “I
leave you peace, my peace I give you.” (Jn 14:27) In his crucified Body, Jesus
abolished the separation wall between peoples, (Eph 2:14) by establishing
peace. It is this peace that we hope to achieve by the grace of God, to which
we dedicate our prayer, our penance and our fast.
8. How to fast
The Church demands a minimum of fasting and
abstinence as follows:
a) Those above 14 are asked to abstain
from meat on Fridays during Lent, during the time of the Passion, and on Ash
Wednesday.
b) Those between 21 and 60 are urged to
be satisfied with only one meal per day. The sick and elderly are excused from
this practice.
c) In addition to abstinence and fasting
from certain foods and drinks, it is the “spiritual” fast which most pleases
the Lord: that our sense of “fasting” extends to refusing sin, “in word, act,
and omission.”
d) During Lent, it is advised to avoid
succulent meals and alcoholic beverages. It is suitable to abstain from or
limit smoking. To promote an atmosphere of contemplation and of piety, it would
be beneficial to avoid or reduce viewing spectacles, especially on television
and the internet.
e) So that charity and almsgiving might
accompany our fast, we suggest that the fruit of our sacrifices and
renunciations be offered to the poor, and to a vital project for our Diocese. I
propose, in particular, donations for the construction of the Church of the
Baptism of the Lord and the adjacent convent on the Jordan.
Conclusion
In the Mother Church of the Holy City, the
city of Calvary, of the empty tomb of the
Resurrection, of the Church of the
Ascension and of Pentecost, we pray with fervor. We plead that the Lord accept
our penance and include us, in spite of our weaknesses, “in the procession of
his triumph” over evil, sin, and death. (Eph 1:15-23)
And “that the Lord, creator of heaven and
earth, bless you all the days of your life.” (Ps 128:5)
I wish all of you a holy Lent and a happy
Easter!
† Fouad Twal, Latin Patriarch
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