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A Poem, A Proverb, A Painting, A Prayer: A Lenten Journey-- Day 3: Friday after Ash Wednesday

This is the third in a series of Lenten devotionals put together by Mother Leslie for this season of Lent, 2025. We hope this proves to be uplifting to you through your Lenten journey.


If you would like to see previous devotionals, Look under "Home Worship Materials" on the Site map, or click here.


Today's Theme: Keeping a Holy Lent


Poem: For Lent, 1966

It is my Lent to break my Lent,

     To eat when I would fast,

To know when slender strength is spent,

     Take shelter from the blast

When I would run with wind and rain,

     To sleep when I would watch.

It is my lint to smile at pain

     But not ignore its touch.

 

It is my Lent to listen well

     When I would be alone,

To talk when I would rather dwell

     In silence turn from none

Who call on me to try to see

     That what is truly meant

Is not my choice. If Christ's I'd be

     It's thus I'll keep my Lent.

-- Madeleine L’Engle (1918-2007), poet, novelist, and Episcopalian, from Uncollected Poems

 

Proverb:

“The Christian does not think that God will love us because we are good,

     but that God will make us good because he loves us.”

-- C. S. Lewis, writer, teacher, and convert to Anglicanism

 

 

Painting: The Fight Between Carnival and Lent, by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, 1559



Prayer:

To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul;

O my God, in you I trust.

You are the God of my salvation,

To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul.

In you I hope all the day long.

O my God, in you I trust.

Remember, Lord, your compassion and love,

for they are from everlasting.

To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul;

O my God, in you I trust.

-------- from the Church of England’s Daily Prayer page





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