Giving Something Up

For most older Catholics, the first thought that Lent brings to mind is giving something up.  In my childhood, the standard was to give up candy, a discipline that found suitable reward in the baskets of sugary treats we received on Easter.  Some of us even added to the Easter surplus by saving candy all through Lent, stockpiling what we would have eaten had we not promised to give it up.

Some years ago a friend of mine told me that he had urged his children to move beyond giving up candy to giving up some habit of sin that marked their lives.  About halfway through Lent he asked the children how they were doing with their Lenten promise.  One of his young sons had promised to give up fighting with his brothers and sisters during Lent.  When his father asked him how it was going, the boy replied, “I’m doing pretty good, Dad – but boy, I can’t wait until Easter!”

That response indicates that this boy had only partly understood the purpose of Lenten “giving up.”  Lent is about conversion, turning our lives more completely over to Christ and his way of life.  That always involves giving up sin in some form.  The goal is not just to abstain from sin for the duration of Lent but to root sin out of our lives forever.  Conversion means leaving behind an old way of living and acting in order to embrace new life in Christ.

What are you giving up for Lent?


For More Information:

Director of Faith Development
Br. Scott Slattum, OFM
Phone:  602-354-2082
Email:  [email protected]

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