Has anyone ever told you to stop being so thankful, stop
being so content, stop being so happy? Probably not. Has
anyone ever told you to stop complaining? Probably yes,
and it may even have been you, talking to yourself. We
seem to be more inclined to paying attention to the
people and things in our lives that are negatives,
problems, troubles, and we tend to spend a lot more time
and effort, thought and emotion on the difficulties we
find facing us than we do on the positive people and
events that are in our lives. We have all asked other
people who appear sad, upset or angry, "What's wrong?"
But have you ever gone up to someone and asked, "What's
right?" (They would probably answer back, "what's wrong
with you?")
Deep in the core of our spiritual awareness, we believe
our lives should be filled with love, contentment, peace
and a sense of well-being and satisfaction. So, when
something threatens or upsets the good life we believe
we should have, it really gets our attention. That's why
we invest more interest in what is wrong in our lives
than we do about what is good in our lives. We want to
fix it. But there's another problem here. Generally
speaking, we often think that most of what is wrong in
our lives is coming to us from “out there” and not from
“in here.” So even though we acknowledge that we are
sinners and that we have faults, what really gets us
disturbed are the sins and faults of others, and the
troubles and problems that come to us from “out there.”
Fill in the ending of this sentence: “My life would be
so much better if_________.” Is it something “out
there,” or something “in here”? It’s true that difficult
and bad things do come to us from “out there” but so
often there is not much we can do about that. Why do we
allow so much of our focus to center on “out there”
rather than on “in here,” a place where I actually can
make a change?
The Lenten season is often seen as a season of "nots," a
time of negatives such as giving up foods or other
enjoyments. But a Lenten lifestyle should include things
such as spending more time in prayer and praying at
services in church, going to confession and confronting
my sins, changing my daily routine so that I am more
open to grace, doing more spiritual reading instead of
something else, setting aside money to help those in
need, forgiving those who have offended me. We know that
all of these things are good things in our minds, they
are positive things but so many times we resist doing
them because when it comes down to the nitty gritty,
they actually end up seeming negative to us. We resist
doing them perhaps because when it gets down to
answering the question, “What will make my life better?”
we want to find those changes coming from “out there”
and not from “in here” – because changing “in here” just
seems so very hard to do. (But changing “all that - over
there" is so very easy, right?)
Christ came to save us. He came to save us “in here.” He
came to save us so that we could live in Him. He came to
save us despite the fact that we are sinners, because He
is the one Who forgives us our sins. He came to save us
that we might have lives that are as full and rich as
they can possibly be, and to heal the wounds that have
marked and weakened our lives in this world. He came to
save us from all that is deadly and evil, from all that
is inhuman. And even more than from other people, he
came to save us from ourselves.
I know I need saving, but too often I think of being
saved from people and things out there, but that's not
the first place where I need it. So, I ask you to
consider this and see these coming weeks without any
negative attitudes towards any extra spiritual work,
work that will make us better Christians, work that will
improve us as sons and daughters of God. Instead let us
focus on the positive blessings that Lent can bring us
to share in, because we positively need to improve
ourselves with the help of the Savior. If you have any
negative thoughts about the Great Fast, and usually
those negative thoughts will translate into spending
this time basically the same way we spend our time the
rest of the year, I ask you to please think about it
again. What's right with Lent? It's a great opportunity
to draw closer to the Savior. So that we can get right.
So, we can be genuinely right. Not out there, but in
here. And let us give thanks to God, because even though
we are often unfaithful and ungrateful and lazy about
our own salvation, He still holds out His hand for us to
take.