Commentary

 

Lent

By Rev. Emily Jane Lemole

This painting by Wilhelm Wachtel shows Hannah, the mother of the prophet Samuel, when she was praying for a son.

LENT

A sermon by Rev. Emily Jane A. Lemole

Readings: Joel 2:12-17, Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21

Secrets of Heaven 6315

Lent is a special time of preparation for Easter. The name comes from an Anglo-Saxon word meaning “the lengthening of days” referring to winter’s short days stretching into spring's longer, lighter ones.

Historically, in the Christian church, "Lent" has been a forty day time for focused penitence, fasting, almsgiving and prayer.

Lent begins with Ash Wednesday, 40 days before Easter Sunday, when – in some Christian denominations - ashes from the previous year's Palm Sunday were used to make the sign of the cross on people's foreheads. With the ashes, Lent starts by reminding us not to take natural life too seriously – that it is brief, and we are all here for a short stay – some shorter than others. “The things of this world pass away, come let us in Him rest” – goes the hymn. “Remember, you are dust and to dust shall you return,” (Ecclesiastes 3:20).

However, we do need to become serious about our spiritual lives – and Lent affords us that opportunity. The Lord said deny yourselves – take up your cross and follow Me. What is our cross? Temptation. It's our cross. Because of continual conflict between our external natural life and the internal spiritual one, there is temptation. The battle is over our dual nature. We know from experience this is a tall order, considering our natural inclinations. When our conscience (God speaking through our soul) runs counter to our natural desires, we are torn between what we want to do and God’s will for us. Our love of self and love of the world clash with our love to the Lord and our neighbor.

Lent gives us a framework and a theme in which to practice what we preach... to bring to life those truths that happily stay inside in our heads and by doing so never take form – never come to life. Specific acts manifest our beliefs, and give shape and reality to them. In modern language this is called walking your talk. “All religion relates to life—and the life of religion is to do good,” Swedenborg teaches.

Lent can be the path to that good, which is of course the Lord’s. We can know all the theology in the world and still know only about God – without ever really knowing or experiencing God. This "staying in our heads" has been described as enjoying the menu but never moving to the meal. The menu can be fun to read, but it has no nourishment, reality, or usefulness by itself. It is only a preview of what is to come.

John the Baptist said, "Repent!" The word repent comes from the Greek word metanoia, meaning to turn around, change direction! Lent provides that time for repentance. It must begin with reflection and self-examination. Self-examination — especially as to our motives. Intention, Swedenborg says, holds the key to repentance.

From the Apocalypse Revealed:

“Actual repentance is to examine yourself, to know and acknowledge your sins, to hold yourself guilty, to confess them before the Lord, to implore help and the power to resist them, and thus to abstain from them, and lead a new life, doing all these things as of yourself. Do this once or twice a year, when you approach the Holy Supper, and afterwards when the sins, of which you have found yourself guilty, recur, then say to yourself, “I will not consent to them because they are sins against God.” This is actual repentance.” (Apocalypse Revealed 531:5)

To make ourselves guilty of every wrong or bad thing we have ever done is counterproductive, and only makes us feel helpless. The hells are happy when they make us feel hopeless. We need to recognize where we have failed, as identified in the penitent prayer. We need to ask for the Lord’s help and be confident that He can re-form us. Working on one quality or habit at a time is realistic for Lent. Taking on the hells is a daunting assignment until we realize we have the Lord, Heaven, and all the angels on our side.

As we read at the beginning of the service, Swedenborg speaks of worldly cares and external interests as being on a sensory level in a person’s life. When in this state, he says, we avoid and even object to thinking and talking about deeper spiritual matters. But when we are not overly concerned with worldly cares, and are living a good life, we see what is right and fair and spiritually good. What do we identify with, and to what are we attached?

We can’t deal with what we refuse to see, and don’t admit to. Looking carefully at our lives, especially our motives and objectives, what makes us happy, what makes us sad or angry, can be the key to realizing what lies beneath the surface of our lives, often appearing as perfectly fine and good. We can be asleep to our real intentions and essentially asleep to our spiritual life. The Lord gives us wake-up calls all the time — when we don’t get our own way, illness, loss in its many forms including aging. We can understand that difficulties are part of life. They are opportunities to deepen and observe the nature of our spiritual person. If we’re already awake when the alarm sounds, it’s a lot less startling and we’re better prepared for it.

This is the time to take inventory — to see who we are, what we love, and how our choices are determining where our life path leads. We are what we love! By following the example of Jesus in His time of temptation in the wilderness, we can carry our crosses or temptations to a quiet place absent the world, as the wilderness was absent the world. This is a place for observing what is in our hearts, asking forgiveness and a changed heart. This is hard, hard work and we will not like what we see. Swedenborg does not paint a pretty picture regarding our natural state.

The Lord has made us so that we can choose to change — to change patterns of our thoughts and habits of life so that He can change our hearts. What we start out doing because we know is right, can be transformed into doing what is right, because we love it.

We cannot deal with what we cannot see. Instead of the magnifying glass with which we enlarge other’s faults we need a mirror on our own souls — to see what we love — and what motivates all we do. We can’t hit a target we can’t see — and Lent can identify that target.

Lent gives us a focus and construct to do this. As we take on a specific habit or mind-set we might also reflect on what the opposite of that negative quality may be.

Gossiping. stop. >> Speak kindly of others

Lying. stop. >> Tell the truth

Resenting. stop. >> Be grateful

Fearing. stop. >> Trust

Father Richard Rohr, a well-known Franciscan priest, said, “God loves us not because we are good, but because He is good."

Lent is not a time for earning God’s approval or God’s love. (It is there no matter what). We don’t earn points or impress God by our good behavior. Adding one more activity to our already hurried lives isn’t the answer. The meaning lies in a different kind of activity, a Spiritual Practice, or purposeful, mindful, behavior to reflect our deepest longing for knowing and being known by God.

Giving Things Up

Giving things up is a central theme of Lent. Those things to give up are habits of thought and life that block the way on our spiritual journey to God, thoughts such as: I lead a good life, I’m a good person — I don’t rob, steal or murder. This doesn’t apply to me. Or, habits of mind such as self-righteousness, denial, criticism of others, complaint, and justification. And habits of the body — undisciplined living that undermines health and well being.

In a book called "From Sacrifice to Celebration, a Lenten Journey", Evan Howard describes the essential giving up present in Lent.

“Disciplining our will and desires is a spiritual matter with physical implications. In the United States, the seductions of countless advertisers make discipline difficult. The excesses of commercialism invite us to live beyond our limits, increasing our vulnerability to addiction. The way to freedom is found in reorienting one’s will and desire toward God. In the words of John of the Cross, 'It is not the things of this world that either occupy the soul or cause harm, since they enter it not, but rather the will and desire for them.'”

Howard continues:

“The longstanding tradition of fasting or giving up harmful attitudes or actions during this season is meant to increase our discipline. Self-denial is an exercise in letting go. But it cannot be done alone. God’s help is necessary. Just as our fasting will falter unless spiritually empowered, so our attempt to live as Christians will fail unless divinely guided. We cannot accomplish some goals without maximum commitment. Growth in Christian life is one of them. Lent declares that commitment without reliance on God is futile.”

We can fast from many things besides food.

Fasting

Fast from complaining, and feast on praise

Fast from negatives, and feast on affirmatives

Fast from unrelenting pressures, and feast on unceasing prayer

Fast from hostility and feast on tenderness

Fast from bitterness, and feast on forgiveness

Fast from self-concern, and feast on compassion for others

Fast from the shadows of sorrow, and feast on the sunlight of serenity

Fast from idle gossip, and feast on purposeful silence

Fast from judging others, and feast on the Christ within them.

The poet Robert Herrick wrote this poem,

To Keep a True Lent

Is this a Fast, to keep

the larder lean?

And clean

From fat of veals and sheep?

Is it to quit the dish

of flesh, yet still

To fill

The platter high with fish?

Is it to fast an hour,

Or ragg’d t go,

Or show

A down-cast look and sour?

No: ‘tis a Fast to dole

They sheaf of wheat

And meat

With the hungry soul.

It is to fast from strife

And old debate,

And hate;

To circumcise thy life.

To show a heart grief-rent;

To starve thy sin,

Not bin;

And that’s to keep thy Lent.

Enter Mary and Martha

What do these sisters have to teach us to guide and deepen our Lent? We all know the story of Mary and Martha, and how they differ from one another. Martha represents that part of all of us that lives in the demanding daily practical world doing what needs to be done, and like Martha, is probably anxious and troubled about many things. This is the Martha life that is filled with the stress of not enough time, too much to do. We can easily label someone as Martha or a Mary. A practical person of action versus a reflective listening receptive one. But each one of us carries both within. Conflict comes when the worries, real and imagined, run wild without the spiritual guidance of Mary’s heart.

Let’s see what Jesus pointed out to Martha, the anxious and troubled one. He didn’t criticize her work, only her priorities, and her attitude. We can hear Him say with love, Martha, Martha — as if to coax her gently back to see that “the only necessary thing” must not be put off — must not be disregarded or seen as extraneous in the practical world of getting things done. Here is a lesson for Lent. We must recognize the need for the Mary in us, longing to experience God, longing to sit and listen and learn and love Him. To stop the busyness, the noise, the activity, long enough to hear His voice, to feel His presence; long enough to know His peace. There is no worry in Mary’s heart. She has chosen the better part — she is listening, she is still, the clamor of daily life has been selectively silenced by her choice to sit quietly.

It’s not that our Martha won’t still have much to do. The work never goes away. But now the work has been given meaning, purpose, and perspective. There’s much to do to be useful and serve each other with love, but Martha’s worry and resentfulness can be transformed to full gratitude and peacefulness.

How do we develop the Mary part — how do we sit at the feet of Jesus? Lent gives us a golden opportunity to begin a practice and create a plan for our Mary. We will never find time — we must make time — to be with God — to meet with Him. First things first! “Seek ye first the kingdom of Heaven…”

We all need a quiet place — a sacred space to sit at God’s feet with a quiet mind and open heart. Carving a meditation and prayer time out of a busy life can be challenging. However the Lord gives us 24 hours a day and we with our Martha hearts find it difficult to give back even a half hour. This God time must be created with purpose – an act of will — (really God’s urging in us). Not just when it’s convenient or when we feel like it. It’s a standing appointment. Fully evolved spiritual people have found this appointment with God to be essential.

Martha was troubled. Martha was worried.

Worry and resentment are a part of all of our lives. Anxiety arises over troubles real and imagined. As Joanna Weaver points out in her book "Having a Mary Heart In a Martha World":

"Jesus didn’t say we might have troubles. He said we will. But He also said, “Take heart, I have overcome the world.” The Bible tells us over and over again not to worry. Twenty-five times in the New Testament alone."

What do we worry about?

40% are things that will never happen.

30% are about the past.

12% are about criticism by others, mostly untrue.

10% are about health, which gets worse with stress.

8% are about real problems that can be solved.

Worry demonstrates our lack of trust in the Lord’s providing for every one of us, every moment in our lives. Worry distorts our priorities, and first things not only don’t come first but are forgotten. Anxiety with its basis in fear, can ruin one’s physical, mental and spiritual health. As Dr. Phil says, “How’s that working for you?” Well, actually worry doesn’t work.

And one antidote?

In Philippians St. Paul urges,

“Think on these things”:

“Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever things are true, whatever things are honest, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.”

Doesn’t sound like the evening news, does it?

Here are the Mary things to remember for Lent:

Scheduling time for prayer, meditation, for reading the Word, singing, chanting, whatever quiets the inside and outside of our lives, and turns our thoughts and affections to the spiritual. This cannot be an add-on at the end of the day or when it fits in, but the most important time. Perhaps first thing in the morning, to thank the Lord for a new day—and set its course on God’s guidance; and before bed to reflect on the day and learn from it. An old English proverb says, “Prayer is the key to the morning and the lock of night.”

And others:

1. Ask the “Lord to create in us a clean heart and put a new and right spirit within us.” Observing Lent says with our mind and heart, “Show me your way, O Lord. I’ve had enough of mine!”

2. Lent defines a time for us to examine our hearts. We want to be cleansed of selfish desires and only worldly interests. The Lord has promised this and it can happen little by little — not an all-at-once heart transplant — but day by day allowing the Lord’s will to replace ours.

3. Mary and Martha paint a picture of our natural life and spiritual life and how they best work together.

4. And finally, the writings of Swedenborg emphasize the importance of self-examination, especially as to our motivation. And they give us the key to Scripture, unlocking the treasure of truths waiting to be loved and lived.

I’ve written a few rules of Lent for myself:

1) To look carefully at the state of my soul, without excuses and the illusion of my own goodness

2) To make a regular appointment with God--and show up!

3) To listen, as Mary listened, in prayer and meditation.

4) To carry that into an active life of use and compassion.

A very tall order!

Won’t you join me in writing your own rules for Lent?

Amen

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Revealed #532

Study this Passage

  
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532. CHAPTER 12

1. Now a great sign appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars.

2. Then being with child, she cried out in labor and in pain to give birth.

3. And another sign appeared in heaven: behold, a great, fiery red dragon having seven heads and ten horns, and seven jewels 1 on its heads.

4. Its tail drew a third of the stars of heaven and threw them to the earth. And the dragon stood before the woman who was ready to give birth, to devour her Child as soon as it was born.

5. She bore a male Child who would shepherd all nations with a rod of iron. And her Child was caught up to God and His throne.

6. Then the woman fled into the wilderness, where she has a place prepared by God, that they may feed her there one thousand two hundred and sixty days.

7. And war broke out in heaven: Michael and his angels fought with the dragon; and the dragon and its angels fought,

8. but they did not prevail, nor was a place found for them in heaven any longer.

9. So the great dragon was cast out, that serpent of old, called the Devil and Satan, which leads the whole world astray; it was cast to the earth, and its angels were cast out with it.

10. Then I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, "Now salvation, and power, and the kingdom of our God, and the authority of His Christ have come, for the accuser of our brethren, which accused them before our God day and night, has been cast down.

11. And they overcame it by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, and they did not love their lives to the death.

12. Therefore rejoice, O heavens, and you who dwell in them! Woe to the inhabitants of the earth and the sea! For the devil has come down to you, having great wrath, knowing that it has a short time."

13. Now when the dragon saw that it had been cast to the earth, it pursued the woman who gave birth to the male Child.

14. But the woman was given two wings of the great eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness to her place, where she might be nourished for a time and times and half a time, from the face of the serpent.

15. So the serpent spewed water out of its mouth like a river after the woman, that it might cause her to be swept away by the river.

16. But the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened its mouth and swallowed up the river which the dragon had spewed out of its mouth.

17. And the dragon was enraged with the woman, and it went off to make war with the rest of her offspring, who keep the commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.

18. Then I stood on the sand of the sea. 2

THE SPIRITUAL MEANING

The Contents of the Whole Chapter

The subject now is the New Church and its doctrine. The woman here means the New Church, and the child that she bore, its doctrine.

Dealt with also are people in today's church who, in accordance with their doctrine, believe in a trinity of Persons and a duality in the Person of Christ, and in justification by faith alone. These are meant by the dragon.

Depicted finally is these people's persecution of the New Church because of its doctrine, and the Lord's protection of it until it grows from being among few to being among many.

The Contents of the Individual Verses:

Verse ContentsSpiritual Meaning
1. Now a great sign appeared in heaven:A revelation from the Lord concerning His New Church in heaven and on earth and the difficulty of its doctrine's being accepted and the antagonism to it.
a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet,The Lord's New Church in heaven, which is the New Heaven, and the New Church to come on earth, which is the New Jerusalem.
and on her head a crown of twelve stars.Its wisdom and intelligence resulting from its concepts of Divine goodness and truth drawn from the Word.
2. Then being with child, she cried out in labor and in pain to give birth.The emerging doctrine of the New Church and the difficulty of its being accepted owing to the opposition to it by people meant by the dragon.
3. And another sign appeared in heaven:A revelation from the Lord concerning people antagonistic to the New Church and its doctrine.
behold, a great, fiery red dragonPeople in the Protestant Reformed Church who make God three entities and the Lord two, and who divorce charity from faith, making faith saving and not at the same time charity.
having seven headsIrrationality owing to their falsifying and profaning the Word's truths.
and ten horns,Much power.
and seven jewels 1 on its heads.All the Word's truths falsified and profaned.
4. Its tail drew a third of the stars of heaven and threw them to the earth.By falsifying the Word's truths they exiled all spiritual concepts of goodness and truth from the church, and by appeals to falsity completely destroyed them.
And the dragon stood before the woman who was ready to give birth, to devour her Child as soon as it was born.Those people meant by the dragon endeavor to snuff out the doctrine of the New Church at its first appearance.
5. She bore a male ChildThe doctrine of the New Church,
who would shepherd all nations with a rod of iron.which by truths drawn from the literal sense of the Word, together with rational arguments in accord with people's natural sight, will convince all those willing to be convinced whose worship is a lifeless worship owing to their divorcing faith from charity.
And her Child was caught up to God and His throne.The Lord's protection of the doctrine and its being guarded by angels in heaven.
6. Then the woman fled into the wilderness,The church being at first among few.
where she has a place prepared by God, that they may feed her there one thousand two hundred and sixty days.The state of that church then, that in the meantime provision may be made for it to exist among more people, until it grows to its appointed state.
7. And war broke out in heaven: Michael and his angels fought with the dragon; and the dragon and its angels fought,The falsities of the previous church fighting against the truths of the New Church.
8. but they did not prevail, nor was a place found for them in heaven any longer.They were convicted of being caught up in falsities and evils, and yet they persisted in them, and therefore they were forcibly withdrawn from any conjunction with heaven and cast down.
9. So the great dragon was cast out, that serpent of old, called the Devil and Satan,Those people now turned away from the Lord to themselves, and from heaven to the world, and so were caught up in the evils of their lusts and in falsities.
which leads the whole world astray;They pervert everything having to do with the church.
it was cast to the earth, and its angels were cast out with it.They were cast into the world of spirits, which is midway between heaven and hell, from which a direct conjunction is formed with people on earth.
10. Then I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, "Now salvation, and power, and the kingdom of our God, and the authority of His Christ have come,The joy of angels in heaven that the Lord alone now reigns in heaven and the church, and that those people are saved who believe in Him.
for the accuser of our brethren, which accused them before our God day and night, has been cast down.By the Last Judgment those were removed who stood in opposition to the doctrine of the New Church.
11. And they overcame it by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony,Victory gained by the Divine truth of the Word and acknowledgment of the Lord,
and they did not love their lives to the death.and they did not love themselves more than the Lord.
12. Therefore rejoice, O heavens, and you who dwell in them!The new state of heaven, that the inhabitants are in the Lord and have the Lord in them.
Woe to the inhabitants of the earth and the sea! For the devil has come down to you, having great wrath,A lamentation over people in the church who are caught up in the falsities of their faith and thus in evil practices, because they are in league with followers of the dragon,
knowing that it has but a short time."because it knew that a new heaven had been formed, that a new church on earth was therefore imminent, and that it would then be cast into hell, along with its followers.
13. Now when the dragon saw that it had been cast to the earth, it pursued the woman who gave birth to the male Child.After they were cast down, followers of the dragon in the world of spirits immediately began to harass the New Church because of its doctrine.
14. But the woman was given two wings of the great eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness to her place,The Divine vigilance for that Church and protection while it was still among a few.
where she might be nourished for a time and times and half a time, from the face of the serpent.Because of the cunning of those leading astray, to provide vigilantly for the New Church to spread among more people, until it grows to its appointed state.
15. So the serpent spewed water out of its mouth like a river after the woman, that it might cause her to be swept away by the river.A multitude of reasonings flowing from falsities in order to destroy the church.
16. But the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened its mouth and swallowed up the river which the dragon had spewed out of its mouth.The multitude of reasonings come to nothing in the face of the spiritual truths rationally understood that are advanced by the Michaels of whom the New Church is formed.
17. And the dragon was enraged with the woman, and it went off to make war with the rest of her offspring, who keep the commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.The hatred ignited in those people who believe themselves wise because of their arguments in support of the mystical union of the Divine and the human in the Lord and in support of justification by faith alone, against those who acknowledge the Lord alone as God of heaven and earth, and the Ten Commandments as law to be lived, and their attacking new converts with the intention of leading them astray.
18. Then I stood on the sand of the sea. 3 John's spiritual state now natural.

THE EXPOSITION

Now a great sign appeared in heaven. (12:1) This symbolizes a revelation from the Lord concerning His New Church in heaven and on earth and the difficulty of its doctrine's being accepted and the antagonism to it.

A sign from heaven means a revelation concerning things to come, and a great sign appearing in heaven means a revelation concerning the New Church, for the woman clothed with the sun, as described in this chapter, symbolizes that church. The male child that she bore symbolizes its doctrine. Her being in pain to give birth symbolizes the difficulty of that doctrine's being accepted. The dragon's attempting to devour the male child, and then persecuting the woman, symbolizes its antagonism. All this is the meaning of the great sign that appeared in heaven.

In the Word a sign is mentioned in relation to things to come, and it is then a revelation. It is mentioned in relation to truth, too, and it is then an attestation. And it is also mentioned in relation to the character of a state or object, and it is then an indicator.

A sign is mentioned in relation to things to come, and is then a revelation, in the following places:

Let them... declare to us what will happen..., that we may... know the latter end of them; or give us to hear things to come. Show signs for the future... (Isaiah 41:22-23)

(The disciples said to Jesus,) "What will be the sign of Your coming and of the end of the age?" (Matthew 24:3, cf. Mark 13:4, Luke 21:7)

...there will be... signs from heaven... There will be signs in the sun, in the moon, and in the stars. (Luke 21:11, 25)

Then the sign of the Son of Man will appear... (Matthew 24:30)

(Hezekiah the king was told:) "This will be the sign... that Jehovah will do this thing... I will bring the shadow... on the sundial of Ahaz... backward." (Later Hezekiah said,) "What is the sign that I shall go up to the house of Jehovah?" (Isaiah 38:7-8, 22)

And so, too, elsewhere.

That a sign is mentioned in relation to truth and is then an attestation, and in relation to the character of a state and is then an indicator, is apparent from other passages in the Word.

Footnotes:

1. The word translated as "jewels" here means diadems or crowns in the original Greek and Latin, but the writer's definition of the term elsewhere make plain that he regularly and consistently interpreted it to mean jewels or gems.

2. In most manuscripts, the Textus Receptus, the received text of the Greek New Testament, makes this verse part of the first verse of the next chapter (13:1), as do numerous translations into other languages. The Alexandrian text, however, and the text of Westcott and Hort, together with some translations, including those Latin versions consulted by the writer, make it verse 18 of the present chapter.

3. In most manuscripts, the Textus Receptus, the received text of the Greek New Testament, makes this verse part of the first verse of the next chapter (13:1), as do numerous translations into other languages. The Alexandrian text, however, and the text of Westcott and Hort, together with some translations, including those Latin versions consulted by the writer, make it verse 18 of the present chapter.

  
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Many thanks to the General Church of the New Jerusalem, and to Rev. N.B. Rogers, translator, for the permission to use this translation.