2012 Lenten Readings Scripture Texts with Selected Readings
The Lenten season begins on Ash Wednesday, and it lasts until the Saturday before Easter Day. The last week of Lent is called Passion Week, which includes both Maundy Thursday (the institution of the Lord’s Supper) and Good Friday (the crucifixion of our Lord). Reminiscent of Jesus’ fasting for forty days in the wilderness, the Lenten season lasts forty days (not counting Sundays). Lent is a time to ask God to confront our own mortality and sinfulness; to ask Him to show us our need for grace; to grow in repentance; and, to reflect on the amazing truth of the Church’s participation in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. For this year, our texts and readings focus on our need for the atoning sacrifice of Jesus Christ. The Cross shows us the depth of our sin and the enormity of our Father’s love for sinners. These thoughts are drawn from Christians who have pondered the Cross of Christ throughout the past twenty centuries, and are meant to complement the Scriptural witness of God’s unfolding plan of redemption. This guide also includes the article, “The Meaning of Lent,” which is a great orientation to the purpose of this season. May you be amazed at the grace of God as you see the truth that Jesus is the Way, the Truth and the Life. May we all be conformed more and more to the likeness of Jesus Christ. Ash Wednesday, February 22 Rend Your Hearts
Joel 2:1-2, 12-17
O Lord, who has mercy upon all, take away from me my sins, and mercifully kindle in me the fire of thy Holy Spirit. Take away from me the heart of stone, and give me a heart of flesh, a heart to love and adore You, a heart to delight in You, to follow and enjoy You, for Christ's sake. Amen. Ambrose of Milan, 4th century
Thursday, February 23 Life or Death
Deuteronomy 30:15-20
O Lord, the house of my soul is narrow; enlarge it that you may enter in. It is ruinous, O repair it! It displeases Your sight. I confess it, I know. But who shall cleanse it? To whom shall I cry but to You? Cleanse me from my secret faults, O Lord, and spare Your servant from strange sins.
Friday, February 24 True and False Fasting
Isaiah 58:1-9a
Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction. Blaise Pascal, 17th century
Saturday, February 25 Calling Sinners
Luke 5:27-32
Today, if we could really be persuaded that we are miserable sinners— that the trouble is not outside us but inside us, and that therefore, by the grace of God, we can do something to put it right— we should receive that message as the most hopeful and heartening thing that can be imagined. Dorothy Sayers, 20th century
First Sunday in Lent, February 26 Create In Me a Clean Heart
Psalm 51
By nothing else, except the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, has death been brought low: The sin of our first parent destroyed, hell plundered, resurrection bestowed, the power given us to despise the things of this world, even death itself, the road back to the former blessedness made smooth, the gates of paradise opened, our nature seated at the right hand of God, and we made children and heirs of God. John of Damascus, 8th century
Monday, February 27 Final Judgment
Matthew 25:31-46
Many, indeed, are the wondrous happenings of that time: God hanging from a Cross; the sun made dark and again flaming out; for it was fitting that creation should mourn with its Creator. The temple veil rent, blood and water flowing from His side; the earth shaken, the rocks shattered because of the Rock; the dead risen to bear witness to the final and universal resurrection of the dead. The happenings at the sepulcher and after the sepulcher—who can fittingly recount them? Yet not one of them can be compared to the miracle of my salvation. A few drops of blood renew the whole world. Gregory Nazianzen, 4th century
Augustine of Hippo, 5th century 2012 Calendar of Lenten Readings
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