Lent and Forgiveness
Lent is the liberation of our enslavement to sin, from the prison of “this world.” The Gospel lesson (Matthew 6:14-21) sets the conditions for that liberation. The first one is fasting — the refusal to accept the desires and urges of our fallen nature as normal, the effort to free ourselves from the dictatorship of flesh and matter over the spirit. To be effective, however, our fast must not be hypocritical, a “showing off.” We must “appear not unto men to fast but to our Father who is in secret.”
The second condition is forgiveness — “If you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you.” The triumph of sin, the main sign of its rule over the world, is division, opposition, separation, hatred. Therefore, the first break through this fortress of sin is forgiveness: the return to unity, solidarity, love. To forgive is to put between me and my “enemy” the radiant forgiveness of God himself. To forgive is to reject the hopeless “dead-ends” of human relations and refer them to Christ. Forgiveness is truly a “breakthrough” of the Kingdom into this sinful and fallen world.
Alexander Schmemann, Great Lent
Alexander Schmemann (1921-1983) was an influential Russian Orthodox priest, teacher, and writer. The majority of his working life was spent at St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary in Crestwood, NY. His teaching focused on helping people see the connection between Christian theology and Christian liturgy. The above is taken from his excellent work, Great Lent: Journey to Pascha.