Lent 1 | 2025

Ask Probing Questions

After his baptism, Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan River and was led by the Spirit into the wilderness, where for forty days he was tempted by the devil.  He ate nothing during those days and afterward Jesus was starving… Luke 4:1-2a

Lent is here - and in no time our complacency is undone. But as Flannery O’Connor reminds us, “What people don’t realize is how much religion costs. They think faith is a big electric blanket, when of course it is the cross.”  

On this first Sunday, I turn to a passage by American pastor Frederick Buechner, who urges us to wake up to the wondrous practice of asking tough questions.

In many cultures there is an ancient custom of giving a tenth of each year’s income to some holy use.  For Christians, to observe the forty days of Lent is to do the same thing with roughly a tenth of each year’s days. 

After being baptized by John in the river Jordan, Jesus went off alone into the wilderness where he spent forty days asking himself the question of what it meant to be Jesus. During Lent, Christians are supposed to ask one way or another what it means to be themselves. 

  • If you had to bet everything you have on whether there is a God or whether there isn’t, which side would get your money and why?

  • When you look at your face in the mirror, what do you see in it that you most like and what do you see in it that you most deplore?

  • If you had only one message to leave to a handful of people who are most important to you, what would it be in 25 words or less?

  • Of all the things you have done in your life, which is the one you would most like to undo?  Which is the one that makes you happiest to remember?

  • Is there any person in the world that, if circumstances called for it, you would be willing to die for?

  • If this were the last day of your life. What would you do with it?

To hear yourself try to answer questions like these is to begin to hear something not only of who you are but of both what you are becoming and what you are failing to become.  It can be a pretty depressing business all in all, but if sackcloth and ashes are at the start of it, something like Easter may be at the end.  – Frederick Buechner, Wishful Thinking

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Reflections on Place | Ellie Joye ‘25

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Ash Wednesday 2025