Sunday February 22, 2026

Our annual Lenten pilgrimage has begun. Lent, it seems to me, is a profoundly misunderstood season. Over the years I have heard many share their dislike of this season because it is too dour. I have heard people lament that Lent is a time where we are told we are bad people; that it encourages a harmful posture of self-deprecation.
There are good reasons for this. The Church has a long history of using language around sin as a weapon to manipulate and control people, and as a tool to demonize those who do not fit a narrowly defined standard of being in the world. Like some of you, I too have experienced this in my own life both as a lay person and as a priest. I do not fault a single person who is wary of Lent. And, I hope that together we can shift our understanding of this holy season.
On Sunday we hear of Jesus’ time in the wilderness. After his baptism, Matthew tells us, “Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil” (Matthew 4:1, NRSV). Our wilderness experience of Lent is rooted in Jesus’ own experience. It is a time to resist temptation, to refuse to put God to the test, to place ourselves firmly in the arms of God - trusting that no matter what God will not forsake us.
This is our time to begin again by honestly naming where we are in this moment. We do this, in part, by naming our sins. It is important for us to be honest about all the ways we stray from the path of God, the barriers we put up to block God’s love from our lives, the ways we do not honor the belovedness of our neighbors. We name these things so that we can refocus ourselves on how God has called us to live. As we do so, we do not need to fear the wrath of a vengeful God. We can acknowledge these sins because our judgment is rooted in love. As we heard in the psalm on Ash Wednesday, “The Lord is full of compassion and mercy, slow to anger and of great kindness” (103:8, BCP p.733). Above all else, we name honestly the ways we have sinned as a statement of our commitment to strive for that still more excellent way, and our acknowledgment of our utter reliance on the mercy and love of God.
The work of Lent - fasting, praying, reading and meditating on Scripture - are the disciplines that help train us to focus on God, not the idols of this world; to remove the blinders and stumbling blocks from before our path; to accept that we can only thrive in this life by the grace of God.
I hope you will not give up on this season, especially if you have had a complicated relationship with it in the past. These times of difficulty and uncertainty are what Lent is made fore: uncertain wilderness times, when all seems bleak, and hope seems a distant luxury. Lent is made for times like these, for it draws us back to God - where all our hope is founded.
Please accept the gift of this season. The invitation to strip away all distractions and return to what matters most - reorienting our lives towards God; trusting that God greets us with mercy and compassion; committing the fullness of who we are to the love of God.








