Lent challenge: don’t do anything

Several weeks ago, we ran a poll asking what you were doing to commemorate Lent. 28% of you said that you weren't doing anything special. Well, it turns out that doing nothing can also be a way of commemorating Lent and Easter. Drawing from a NYT travel article about "do-nothing vacations," Angelo Matera at Godspy suggests that we consider doing nothing for Lent.

The goal is to scale back on the frantic activities and shopping that characterize much of our normal lives, simplifying your life enough to allow for some extra prayer and contemplation during the Lenten season. He suggests three things during Lent:

  • Nothing that involves spending money.
  • Nothing that requires strapping something to your feet. [Think skiing or other such activities—you're allowed to wear socks and shoes during Lent.]
  • Nothing done with a device that can be purchased at Best Buy.

What's the point of this? From Matera's essay:

What’s the point of doing nothing? To commune with God? That’s reason enough. But can’t you commune with him while doing something like feeding the poor, visiting the sick, or some other act of love? Sure. But often time, we don’t have the spiritual strength to take on such charitable works—or just show compassion to the person closest to us—because we haven’t connected with the source of that strength, through silence, solitude and prayer.

Anybody out there practicing this kind of "simplification" as an act of devotion this Lent?

Login to comment

Comments (4)

I like this. We are so full of "stuff" that we often don't hear the voice of God. When life becomes chaotic, we should apply the Elijah effect... rest, food, solitude. God will come and comfort us in due time.
I agree, humans weren't meant to live such a fast paced life as we do these days. We (humans) seem to live such fast paced life that it seem that no one has time too spend time with the lord. I enjoy spending time with the lord.
I think any time we spend with God is productive and positive but isn't it funny how we invent things like Lent and "quiet time" to fulfil a need which God has already provided for?

God gave us the Sabbath as a "time-out" which comes in many forms: weekly, yearly, every 50 years etc. yet we are looking for other opportunities for quiet without necessarily making use of the ones we have! Isn't Sat/Sun sometimes the most hectic day?
Lent should be a time of communing with the Lord. I receive a powerful uplifting when my partner and I make our bas relief christian scripture wall hangings. Meditation on the scripture that we are producing brings us closer to the Lord. Lent is a great time for this type of mediitation. Each letter of the scripture we are producing sheds new light into the meaning of the scripture as we are making our wall hangings.

See the latest in:

Promotion

promo 1 promo 2
promo 3 promo 4

Donate Now