Life · Ministry · Faith

Tag: lent

Removing Barnacles

old rusting ship
 
Why do large ships have their hulls painted red? The short answer is tradition. It goes back to a time of wooden sailing ships. Ship’s owners would paint their hulls with special paint to protect the wooden hulls from destructive worms and barnacles. The paint contained iron and over time it would rust and turned a lead oxide that turned the hulls red. Today ships are still painted to protect their hulls from barnacles and red is chosen to honor the past. But why would such massive ships be so concerned about a few barnacles any more? It’s true a few barnacles will not have much effect on these incredibly powerful ships. But if left to accumulate on the hull of the vessel, over time, they can dramatically reduce the power and efficiency of the ship, costing their companies thousands of dollars in extra fuel and lost time. Therefore it is imperative they keep their ship’s hull clean.
 
I have come to find that my spiritual life, the health of my soul, can be a lot like the hull of a ship. If left uncared for, barnacles can begin to attach themselves. A few of them have no real impact. But the continued accumulation can weigh me down to the point of sickness with lost power and well-being. The season of Lent in the church begins with Ash Wednesday and continues through to Easter morning. It is a time of forty days of preparation for Easter. During this time, many choose to stop doing certain things, a fast, in order to refocus themselves on Christ. In effect, we are choosing to remove barnacles from our spiritual hulls that have begun to drag us down.
 
For myself, one major barnacle I feel is sucking the life from my soul is Facebook. I need to step away. So, starting this Ash Wednesday, I will not only be not signing in to my account, but I will be deactivating it. Will I come back after Easter? Maybe. I don’t know. In the meantime, if you need to let me know you are sick, had a great meal, died, or want to sell me something, you will have to reach me another way.
 
And now, of course, the challenge. What about you? Have you ever thought of giving something up for Lent? Are there barnacles that have attached to your soul you need to scrape off? Feel free to share, what you are giving up if you like, but, of course, not on Facebook.
 
Stephen

A season of repentence

ash cross

Dear friends,

Lent, the forty-day season leading up to Easter, is an unpleasant time of year. The goal is not to excite but to lead us to repent. It’s not like Christmas. Christmas is a joyous time of anticipation. We look forward to a birth. We have been longing for the Messiah to come and now is he is here. The celebration is like that of parents who have been unable to have children suddenly finding out they have become pregnant. It is a time when we live out the anticipation and celebration of a child’s birth. This is Christmas.

Lent is different. This is a season of the cross. A season of suffering and repentance. A season of renewal and stripping away. Just as Jesus was stripped of his clothes, his dignity, his friends and family and laid bare for the redemption of the world we strip away all that stands between us and the purposes of God for our lives.

Many join in this season by stripping from their lives things which have been allowed to come between them and God in a forty day season of fasting for renewal. The challenge for each of us, whether we formally participate in fasting or not, is to examine our lives for those things which have been allowed to creep and in, then repent and strip away. I have known many who give up caffeine, chocolate, diet soda, or some other food. While it is true these things may be standing in the way of God, their presence, as a stumbling block, often signals something far deeper in our soul. Do we have the courage to peel back another layer and dig deeper for the true source which stands between us and God? Lent is not a spiritualized diet it is deep soul cleansing.

What are you willing to give up? For a long time, I have known I needed to abandoned social media. I have felt its narcissistic envy-inducing claws pierce deep into my soul. I have known I needed to step away but have made many excuses about it being essential to my job. This year, I will stop the excuses. I have found a tool that will allow me to push content to my church’s page without my actually having to be on social media. Beyond that, my participation will go silent. My cover and profile pictures will be replaced by that of the cross. A reminder to this season’s call to repentance.

What about you? What have you allowed to infect you soul which needs to be stripped away? Will you join me in this season you choosing your own act of renewal and repentance?

Pastor Stephen

© 2024 jumpingjersey

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑