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"For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them." Matthew 18:20

 

New article: Prepare Your Heart for Lent

Laura DeMaria

Friends, Lent is now about 23 days away, and you know what that means! I’m already thinking about it. Read my latest article at Catholic Stand, Prepare Your Heart for Lent, which you can also read below.

By the way, to hear the audio of my appearance last week on Morning Air, listen to the conversation here. I joined John Morales to discuss the 6 new venerable servants of God. Listen to my portion starting at 7:30.

As I mention in the article, I am not at all advocating for getting a head-start on your Lent, or extending your chosen penances and practices. I am advocating, though, for preparation, so that you’re not spending half of Lent deciding what to do, and the next half waiting for the prayer book you finally chose to arrive. No good! You will miss out.

I find Lent to be the deepest Liturgical season. I know Easter is far more important, and joyful; and Advent has its own special feeling of hopeful waiting. But Lent is a real soul-searching time, and we do ourselves a disservice not to take advantage of it. So do it! And prepare now. Then, you will be able to more fully enjoy the celebration come Easter.

Prepare your heart for lent

Lent, which begins with Ash Wednesday on February 22 this year, is just around the corner. Now, before the season starts, is the time to start cultivating an interior disposition so that you can fully meet Jesus during that time.

Practical preparation

“What are you going to ‘do’ this Lent?” is always the question we ask each other.
If you decide on your Lenten course of action well in advance of the season, you set yourself up for success. Spending too much time deciding what you will “do” once Lent starts will cause you to miss out on the opportunity to hear and meet Jesus in this incredibly rich liturgical time. You will also have time to plan and prepare: to buy the book you’re going to read and to organize your schedule to allow for prayer or volunteer time.

Mental Preparation

But have you thought about how you will prepare yourself mentally, as well? Entering into prayer is similar: use the first five or ten minutes to remove all the mental noise and distractions. Then, once your mind is calmed, the voice of God will be easier to hear.

Likewise, use the days before Lent to intentionally orient yourself to the upcoming season of penance. As Lent approaches, use your prayer time leading up to Lent to talk to God about what He wants to show you this Lenten season.

Begin to cultivate real silence in your life. Rely less on your phone to fill your time, turn off the TV, and notice when you automatically turn to a podcast or music to fill the silence.

Adopt less self-critical, or other-critical, ways of thinking and speaking. Habits of criticizing arguably generate the worst “noise” in our lives.

Spend time thinking specifically about the purpose of Lent. Do you see these 40 days just as a time of self-deprivation or as an invitation?

I am not recommending starting Lent early, and by all means, give your Fat Tuesday celebration all you’ve got. But “warming up” for Lent through this kind of intentional self-examination can make a big difference in your attitude during the real thing. Lent is a great gift for Catholics. Use it!

How will I spend this Lent?

Traditional Lenten activities tend to fall into one of three categories: prayer, fasting, or service. Are you reading a spiritual book, spending a certain amount of time in prayer each morning, or volunteering at your crisis pregnancy center?

A few years ago, I interviewed a range pf people on their Lenten “plan,” from giving up manicures to writing people hand-written notes. View that article, “Rethinking Lent this Year,” and see if any of their ideas resonate with and inspire you.

You may also want to reach out to your priest or spiritual director to get guidance on how you, in this time and place, will be best served by a particular Lenten practice or practices. 


A Word of advice

A word of advice to the faithful and those trying their best: please do not view Lent and the choices you make as a race or competition. A temptation exists to view our ability to give up things, for example, as owing to our own physical strength or stamina. That’s not even the point! Be wary of how pride or vanity could creep into your Lent, if you are giving up things to prove to others or yourself that you can.

What we’re trying to do when we give up things is to make room in our life for Jesus and to remember His sacrifice. The physical discomfort of Lent reminds us of Christ’s suffering. By clearing out the “stuff” – the noise, the time-wasting behavior, the self-judgment, the sin, the sweets – our hearts and souls are able to more clearly recognize Jesus.

Another word of advice is to choose your Lenten activities because they speak to you, personally. That is most likely where God is calling you. Don’t want to feed the homeless? Okay, don’t. Call up your lonely neighbor instead, or read Cardinal Sarah, or try lectio divina, among many other possibilities.

Embrace the discomfort for these 40 days (minus Sundays). Don’t think too much about it. Ultimately, Lent is a time to follow God more closely, to hear His voice, and finally, to rejoice in the triumph of His love for this world.

What are some reasons for hope in the new year?

Laura DeMaria

This morning I joined John Morales on the Morning Air Show to discuss the good things that happened in 2022, and which can give us cause for hope in the new year. Listen here.

As an aside, the segment starts with a few minutes of banter between the hosts, and the matter of doggie fitbits comes up. Can you imagine? Do you have a pork of a dog who you want to put a step-counting watch on? Hilarious. Hope he doesn’t eat it.

Anyway, we covered the fact that God has it all in control - a refrain in my writing and speaking, as it goes. The good news to cover can be found in my latest article, Reasons for Hope at the End of the Year.

The signs of hope are there. As I emphasized in the conversation, it really is on us to point them out and name them for ourselves. If you have one good thing in a hundred bad things, think about that good thing.

Similarly, think about where that good thing goes next. As I mention in the article and the interview, a by-product of the end of Roe is the fact that supposedly pro-life politicians are going to have to walk the walk, not just talk to the talk, on pro-life legislation and protecting life from conception to natural death. Will we see that this year? Maybe so.

My final bit of advice is to do an examination of conscience, if you are thinking about the beginning of a new year and where you want to go and how you want to be. Allow for silence that will give you the needed environment to hear God speak to you, however that looks. And remember that he is on your side, and wants you to be happy, and it is a choice to believe this. And, as Fr. Mike Schmitz recently said on the Catechism in a Year podcast, sometimes our view of God is very small. He is so much bigger than we believe. We want to put him in a box and ask him to give us the good things we want and know to ask for. But, make 2023 your year of believing God has so much more in store.

God bless you in this year!

Latest update: catch me on Morning Air tomorrow

Laura DeMaria

Happy feast of the Baptism of Jesus! And just like that, Christmas is officially over. I pray for you it was not just warm and fuzzy, but also meaningful.

And if you’re looking to add a little meaning to your life, join me at 7:10 am eastern tomorrow morning, Tuesday, 1/10, where I will be discussing 3 reasons for hope as we start out this new year. It will of course be adapted from my most recent article, Reasons for Hope at the End of the Year. They are: the overturn of Roe, the return to in-person life, and the increase in enrollments at Catholic Schools. Can you think of any good news worth celebrating? Let me know!

See you on the air.