Thoughts for the season of Lent
David Sellnow
A health care worker expressed frustration with her patients. “That’s the second time this week I’ve had to use the warning, ‘You could die!’ … and again it didn’t work.’” A diabetic man with blood sugar numbers off the charts keeps neglecting to take his insulin. A woman whose EKG shows she’s in the process of having a heart attack says she doesn’t feel that bad and refuses to be admitted to the hospital.
When it comes to spiritual diagnosis and treatment, are we much different? We think, “Meh, my sins are not that bad. I’ll be okay.” We’re not eager to deal with our problems, our failures, our chronic iniquities because we’ve become accustomed to living our lives with those issues.
Jeremiah once lamented, “Is there no balm in Gilead? Is there no physician there? Why then has the health of my poor people not been restored?” (Jeremiah 8:22) Plenty of balm and balm-applying physicians did exist in Gilead. And plenty of gospel healing was available to God’s people in Israel—but they did not avail themselves of it. They suffered as a result.
Lent is a time for us to give attention to what ails our hearts—spiritually. We are directed to our need for a physician that can heal our souls. Jesus is that physician. In his ministry, Jesus showed us our sinfulness and offered balm for healing through his redemptive work. Jesus said, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick” (Luke 5:31). Every one of us remains continuously in need of treatment for sin-sickness. The path to health and life for our souls is in Jesus.
Let’s not get lost in superficial approaches to Lent. Giving up this or that food or this or that habit during Lent doesn’t do something redemptive for us. The season’s intent is for us to be honest about our spiritual need and look to Jesus for wholeness and holiness. It’s not about beating ourselves up with guilt over all that Jesus suffered on our behalf. He gave himself for us to set us free from guilt and shame. As Scripture says, “We have confidence to enter the sanctuary by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way that he opened for us …. Since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us approach with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience” (Hebrews 10:19-22). In the midst of Lent, let’s not lose sight of the path of life and fullness of joy that we have in Christ (cf. Psalm 16:11).
As a kid, I couldn’t figure out why people referred to the “40 Days of Lent.” If you count the days from Ash Wednesday through the Saturday of Easter weekend, there are 46 days. Did we mess up the math? Later I learned the reason for the mathematical discrepancy. There are 46 days between Ash Wednesday and Easter, but six of those days are Sundays. The Sundays are not really part of Lent. Every Sunday is a celebration of Jesus’ resurrection. Even in the midst of a Lenten focus on Jesus’ passion (his sufferings and death), we never forget our ultimate hope. We have “a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead” (1 Peter 1:3). And we “hold fast to the confession of our hope without wavering” (Hebrews 10:23). We meet together and encourage each other all the more as we see the Day approaching (Hebrews 10:25). Jesus’ resurrection gives us constant and certain hope. The life of a Christian—including days when we dedicate time to thinking about our sins and Christ’s suffering—is a life filled with hope because Jesus’ life did not end in the grave but in glory.
The 40 days of Lent go back to an old tradition of fasting for 40 days prior to the celebration of Christ’s resurrection, reminiscent of Jesus’ own 40 days of fasting in the desert as he worked out our salvation for us. But even in the most somber days of the church’s history, those days of fasting were interrupted each Sunday. Sunday is the Lord’s Day, the day of his resurrection. Knowing Christ is resurrected, all somberness and shame are chased away, and our hearts rise up to where our home is with our Lord in heaven.
For additional Lenten thoughts, see previous posts:
- https://theelectricgospel.com/time-to-have-our-hearts-checked/
- https://theelectricgospel.com/giving-up-self-redemption-for-lent/
Scripture quotations, except where otherwise indicated, are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.


It was right after all that, right after being sent away from the Garden of Eden, that Adam and Eve began to have children. When they had their first child, they confessed their faith in what God had promised. “With the Lord’s help I have had a baby boy,” Eve said (Genesis 4:1 NIrV). In translating Eve’s words, it’s possible she was even thinking that this child, her first child, might already be the one that God meant in his promise – the one who would crush the serpent’s head and reverse the damage of sin. That wasn’t the case – the Promised One, Jesus Christ, wouldn’t arrive in the human story for several thousand years. But the hope and faith of Adam and Eve remained the same. God had given them promises on which to stake their faith. They grabbed onto those promises. Adam and Eve went forward to bring children into the world as an act of faith.
John’s words cause us to examine our lives. Are we sometimes like spiritual zombies, rather than the truly raised-to-life people that we are in Christ? A zombie is a dead person that goes through the motions of life but isn’t really alive. Does that description ever fit us? Let’s think about what dead bodies do, and apply that to the life of our souls.
What I said before about how zombies and corpses function is false as applied to us now, in our resurrected spiritual lives. 
Since Jesus is with us every day, we can stop fearing the future. We tend to worry enormously about the future—which also is because of sin. If there were no sin, we wouldn’t worry about tomorrow. We’d know tomorrow would be good because all days were good. In a world without sin, there would be no worry. But sin is in our world and in us. That means tomorrow is never sure. We don’t know what mess might fall on our heads. We don’t know what messes we might make for ourselves. We don’t know what messes and misery others will inflict by their sins against us and around us. But we do know this for sure: Jesus will be there tomorrow, with us, just as he has been yesterday and today. That’s our constant, confident hope. The psalmist says, “Israel, hope in Yahweh, for there is loving-kindness with Yahweh. Abundant redemption is with him” (Psalm 130:7). The Lord’s loving-kindness is unflinching, unfailing, rock-solid. The Lord’s redemption is abundant, abiding, all-encompassing. God’s grace to us is something that never changes, never quits, never dies. He has redeemed us fully, completely. He bought us back from the evil of the world and the sin within ourselves. Full redemption, nothing left out—that’s what our Lord God gives to us. His love, his redemption, is an ironclad promise.
All Hallows’ Eve (a.k.a. Halloween) is the day that still gets attention on everyone’s cultural calendar. In the church’s history, All Hallows’ Day, that is, All Saints’ Day, was the more important festival. All Saints’ Day (November 1) is meant to commemorate all of God’s people who have gone on to be with him in glory. It is also a recognition of our connection as Christ’s people on earth to the hosts of heaven. This installment of