The Midweek Slump of Lent: When the Enthusiasm Has Gone but the Season Hasn’t

By Wednesday, Lent has changed character.

The solemnity of Ash Wednesday is a memory. The resolve of Sunday has been tested by email, traffic, and whatever it was we said we were giving up. Lent, it turns out, lasts longer than we expected.

This is the moment when many people quietly disengage. Not dramatically. Just… gently.

The midweek slump is not failure. It is honesty. It reveals that faith sustained by novelty alone will not last.

The good news is that God does not require enthusiasm — only faithfulness. The wilderness does not end when we lose interest; it ends when God says it ends.

Midweek Lent teaches us to keep walking without fireworks. To pray without strong feelings. To trust that God is present even when nothing much seems to be happening.

This is where real faith grows.

Companion Prayer

Patient God,
When our energy fades
and our enthusiasm thins,
remain with us.

Teach us the quiet faith
that walks without applause,
prays without fireworks,
and trusts without proof.

Hold us steady
in the middle places,
and keep us faithful day by day.
Amen.

Bread Alone Would Be Easier: Why Lent Asks Harder Questions Than Hunger

There is something refreshingly honest about the first temptation: bread.

Jesus is hungry. Real hunger. And the suggestion is entirely reasonable. You have power. You have need. Solve the problem.

Lent would be much easier if this were all it asked of us.

If Lent were simply about managing appetites — food, spending, screen time — we could handle that. We like measurable goals. We enjoy modest triumphs. We appreciate Lent that can be tracked with a checklist.

But Jesus refuses bread not because bread is bad, but because it is insufficient.

The deeper temptation is not hunger — it is the belief that hunger can be solved without trust. That life can be sustained without relationship. That we can nourish ourselves without reference to God.

Lent unsettles us because it exposes the things we try to live on instead of God: approval, productivity, distraction, certainty. None of them are evil. All of them are inadequate.

The wilderness teaches us that hunger is not our enemy. It is our teacher.

Companion Prayer

Sustaining God,
You know our hungers—
for food, for meaning, for reassurance.

When we try to fill ourselves
with what cannot satisfy,
turn us gently toward you.

Teach us to trust your word,
to listen for your voice,
and to receive the life
that only you can give.
Amen.

Temptation Isn’t Always Dramatic: The Spiritual Danger of Just Getting Comfortable

When we hear the word temptation, we tend to imagine something dramatic.

A struggle. A crisis. A decision worthy of a movie soundtrack. But the temptations Jesus faces in the wilderness are, in many ways, surprisingly ordinary. Bread when you’re hungry. Safety when you’re vulnerable. Power when you’re tired of waiting.

Most temptations are not wicked; they are comfortable.

The spiritual danger most of us face is not scandal but settling. Getting used to prayer that asks nothing of us. Faith that fits neatly into our routines. A discipleship that never quite inconveniences us.

Comfort is a subtle thing. It doesn’t shout. It whispers. It suggests that this is good enough, that nothing more is required, that growth can wait until next week — preferably a quieter one.

Jesus resists not because comfort is evil, but because it is incomplete. Bread alone is not enough. Safety without trust is too small. Power without love corrodes.

Lent invites us to notice where our faith has become padded, upholstered, and carefully arranged to avoid discomfort. Not to shame us — but to wake us.

God is not offended by our comfort. But God loves us too much to leave us there.

Companion Prayer

Challenging God,
You know how easily we settle for less
than the life you offer.

When comfort dulls our hunger for you,
stir us gently awake.
When faith becomes routine,
call us deeper.

Give us courage to follow you
beyond what is easy,
and grace to trust you
when the way forward stretches us.
Amen.

The First Sunday of Lent: When the Journey Begins Before We Feel Ready

Lent begins, as most important things do, slightly before we feel prepared.

Jesus is baptised. The heavens open. God speaks. And then—without so much as a packing list — Jesus is sent straight into the wilderness. No debrief. No planning meeting. No opportunity to ask sensible questions like, “How long will this be?” or “Is there cell service?”

The Church, helpfully, does much the same to us.

We mark ourselves with ashes, clear our throats solemnly, and announce our intention to walk with Jesus for forty days. And almost immediately we discover that we are not as organised, resolved, or spiritually limber as we imagined on Ash Wednesday evening.

This is not a design flaw. It is the point.

Lent does not begin with readiness; it begins with willingness. The wilderness is not entered by experts, but by those who say yes before they have the map fully unfolded. Faith, inconveniently, is practiced in real time.

We would prefer to start Lent once we feel properly focused, prayerful, and morally impressive. God, however, seems content to begin with us exactly as we are — tired, distracted, hopeful, and a little unsure where we left our resolve.

The temptation story that opens Lent is not about heroic endurance. It is about trust formed under pressure. Jesus does not stride confidently through the wilderness; he walks it. Slowly. Hungry. Human.

And so do we.

Lent 1 reminds us that the journey of faith is not postponed until we feel ready. It begins when we step forward anyway — carrying what we have, trusting that God has already gone ahead.

The wilderness does not mean we have failed. It means we have started.

Companion Prayer

Faithful God,
You call us forward before we feel prepared.
When the road opens sooner than expected
and the wilderness feels close at hand,
walk with us.

Give us courage for the journey,
patience with ourselves,
and trust that you meet us not at the finish,
but in the first uncertain steps.

Lead us, as you led your Son,
and keep us faithful along the way.
Amen.

Before We Improve Ourselves: Letting God Like Us First

By Saturday, Lent has already acquired a certain tone.

The enthusiasm of Ash Wednesday has softened. The noble plans have met reality. Some resolutions are wobbling slightly. Others are being renegotiated in ways that would impress any seasoned diplomat.

This is usually the point at which we begin to suspect that Lent is really about self-improvement.

We speak of becoming better Christians, more disciplined people, holier versions of ourselves. We approach Lent as if it were a spiritual fitness programme, complete with benchmarks, setbacks, and the faint guilt of missed sessions. God, we assume, is waiting patiently at the finish line with a clipboard.

The trouble is, God has never shown much interest in this arrangement.

The Gospel does not suggest that God loves us once we have improved sufficiently. It insists, rather inconveniently, that God loves us already. Not as a reward, but as a starting point. Not because we are impressive, but because we are God’s.

Lent is not about persuading God to like us. It is about discovering that God already does — and letting that unsettling truth change us.

Self-improvement begins with dissatisfaction. Repentance begins with honesty. And grace begins with affection. God does not wait for us to become lovable. God begins there, and invites us to live differently because we are loved, not in order to earn it.

Saturday is a good day to hear this. A day without liturgy, without spectacle, without the pressure of performance. A day when God seems quite content to sit with us as we are, without suggestions, without notes, without a progress report.

Lent will ask things of us, yes. It will invite us to change, to release what harms us, to take up practices that heal. But none of this happens because God is disappointed in us. It happens because God delights in us too much to leave us unchanged.

Before we improve ourselves — even slightly — we are invited to rest in this quiet, radical truth: God already knows us. God already loves us. And Lent begins there.

Companion Prayer

Loving God,
Before we try harder,
before we promise change,
before we measure our faithfulness,
remind us that we are already known.

Free us from the fear that we must earn your love.
Let your delight in us
be the ground from which repentance grows.

Teach us to rest in your grace,
to change because we are loved,
and to walk this Lenten road
held, not judged.

Receive us as we are,
and lead us where you will.
Amen.

Learning to Walk Slower: Lent, Fridays, and the Spiritual Discipline of Not Rushing

Friday arrives with expectations.

Somewhere deep in the collective Christian memory is the idea that Fridays in Lent should feel different. Quieter. Leaner. Perhaps involving less bacon. What we are less clear about is how exactly this difference is meant to show itself — beyond mild hunger and a vague sense of virtue.

But Lent, if it is honest, is not so much about subtraction as it is about pace.

The modern world is very good at speed. We rush through meals, through conversations, through prayer. We read headlines but not paragraphs, prayers but not silence. Even repentance, we prefer to do efficiently. We would like to confess our sins, receive absolution, and move briskly on to improved behaviour by Tuesday at the latest.

Lent, stubbornly, refuses to cooperate.

Friday invites us into a slower rhythm — not because slowness is morally superior, but because it is spiritually honest. You cannot rush your way into repentance any more than you can rush your way into love. Both take time. Both require attention. Both involve stopping long enough to notice what is actually happening inside us.

The Gospel suggests, again and again, that Jesus was never in a hurry. He walked everywhere. He stopped for interruptions. He listened to long stories. He allowed people to take their time coming to faith — and sometimes to take their time walking away.

This is deeply inconvenient for those of us with calendars.

Friday in Lent is not an invitation to austerity for its own sake. It is an invitation to walk more slowly through the day. To eat with awareness. To speak with intention. To pray without checking the time. To discover that God does not shout instructions from ahead, but walks beside us, content with the pace of companionship.

We rush because we are afraid of falling behind. Lent gently suggests that perhaps we are afraid of stopping long enough to see what we are carrying.

Learning to walk slower is not laziness. It is trust. Trust that the world will not collapse if we pause. Trust that God is not impressed by speed. Trust that the long road of faith is best travelled one attentive step at a time.

On this Friday, Lent does not ask you to do more. It simply asks you to stop sprinting.

Companion Prayer

Unhurried God,
You walk with us at the pace of love,
not the speed of our schedules.

Slow us down when we rush past grace.
Teach us to notice the weight we carry
and the gifts we overlook.

Give us patience for the journey,
attention for the present moment,
and trust that you are not far ahead
but faithfully beside us.

Help us walk this day in your company.
Amen.

The Morning After the Ashes: When Lent Feels Awkward, Ordinary, and Slightly Underwhelming

There is something profoundly anticlimactic about the Thursday after Ash Wednesday.

Yesterday, the church was full. There were ashes. There were solemn prayers. There were people who had not been seen since approximately the Feast of the Ascension, all turning up at once, earnest and slightly nervous, as if Lent might be graded. The sanctuary smelled faintly of burned palm crosses and human resolve.

Today, the church smells like… Thursday.

The ashes have been washed off most faces, though not all coats. Somewhere in the parish hall there is still a bowl that once held holy soot, now sitting awkwardly beside the coffee urn, unsure of its future. And Lent — this great season of repentance and renewal — has begun not with a trumpet blast but with laundry.

This, I think, is exactly right.

We are accustomed to beginnings that announce themselves loudly. We like fireworks, ribbon cuttings, and dramatic moments of decision. But the Christian life, inconveniently, begins again and again in quiet, ordinary ways. After the liturgy ends, after the music fades, after the ashes are rubbed away by mittens and scarves, there is simply life. Dishes to wash. Emails to answer. A bus to catch. A neighbour who still needs help with the recycling bins.

And here is the small, slightly disappointing truth Lent teaches us right from the start: God does not linger only in the dramatic moment. God stays for the morning after.

The danger of Ash Wednesday is that we mistake the ritual for the work. We imagine that because something solemn happened, something complete must have happened as well. But repentance is not a single gesture; it is a posture slowly learned. The ashes do not finish the work—they begin it, and then politely step aside.

On this Thursday, nothing feels particularly holy. And yet this is where holiness begins to show its true character. Not in great vows, but in the patient decision to keep going. To pray again, even when the prayer feels thin. To love again, even when it feels unremarkable. To trust that God is still at work long after the smudge has faded.

If Lent only worked on days when we felt appropriately penitent, it would collapse by Friday. Fortunately, God has a long-standing affection for awkward mornings, half-finished intentions, and people who begin again without much fanfare.

The morning after the ashes reminds us that the Christian life is not lived in liturgies alone, but in the quiet persistence that follows them. God is still here. Lent has only just begun. And no one is keeping score.

Companion Prayer

Gracious God,
You meet us not only in sacred moments
but in ordinary mornings.
When the ashes are washed away
and our resolve feels thinner than we hoped,
stay with us.

Teach us to begin again without drama,
to walk faithfully without applause,
and to trust that small steps taken with love
are more than enough.

Keep us gentle with ourselves,
patient with others,
and open to the quiet work of grace.
Amen.

Ash Wednesday: The Day the Church Tells the Truth (Gently, and With Ashes)

Ash Wednesday ceremony to mark start of Lenten season | DailyNews
Ash Wednesday: when the church tells the truth — and calls it grace.

Ash Wednesday is the Church’s way of clearing its throat before speaking honestly.

After weeks of light — candles, stars, wise travellers, shimmering mountaintops — we arrive at a day when the Church looks us squarely in the eye and says, with pastoral restraint and a pinch of ash: You are mortal. You are loved. Let’s not pretend otherwise.

There is something wonderfully undramatic about Ash Wednesday. No lilies. No trumpets. No Alleluias hiding behind the hymn numbers. Just dust, a short sentence, and the faint smell of last year’s Palm Sunday.

And yet — this is one of the most merciful days in the Christian year.

Ash Wednesday does not arrive shouting. It does not accuse. It does not scold. It simply tells the truth we have been carefully stepping around since January: that we are finite, fragile, inconsistent creatures, prone to enthusiasm followed by fatigue, spiritual heroics followed by snacks.

The Church does not impose ashes as punishment. They are not a spiritual demerit badge. They are a sign of honesty. The kind that says, We are dust — but dust God delights in breathing life into.

What I love most about Ash Wednesday is that it lowers the bar in exactly the right way. Lent does not begin by asking what we will accomplish, conquer, or master. It begins by reminding us who we are before we do anything at all.

“You are dust, and to dust you shall return.”

It is not a threat. It is a relief.

Because if we are dust, then perfection was never the expectation.
If we are dust, then failure is not the end of the story.
If we are dust, then grace has plenty of room to work.

Ash Wednesday does not ask us to be impressive. It asks us to be present.
It does not ask us to fix ourselves. It asks us to notice ourselves.
It does not say, “Do better.”
It says, “Come back.”

And the ashes — smudged, uneven, sometimes applied with more enthusiasm than accuracy—are the Church’s quiet way of saying: You do not have to carry everything into Lent. You can set some things down.

Lent, properly understood, is not about subtraction for its own sake. It is about making room. Room for prayer that is honest rather than heroic. Room for kindness that is small but real. Room for God to meet us not at our best, but as we are — dusty, tired, hopeful, and still loved beyond measure.

Ash Wednesday tells the truth. And then, mercifully, it sends us home to live into it.

Companion Prayer for Ash Wednesday

Holy God,
you formed us from the dust
and breathed into us the breath of life.

On this day of ashes,
help us to tell the truth about ourselves —
our limits, our longings, our need for grace.

Free us from the burden of pretending,
from the exhausting work of self-improvement,
from the fear that we are not enough.

Teach us, in these Lenten days,
to return to you gently,
to pray honestly,
to love faithfully,
and to trust that even dust
is precious in your hands.

Through Jesus Christ,
who knows our frailty
and walks with us still.
Amen

Shrove Tuesday: Or, the Day the Church Invented Pancakes (for Holy Reasons)

Pancakes
Shrove Tuesday: when the church prepares us for Lent by reminding us that joy, butter, and forgiveness are all part of the recipe.

Shrove Tuesday is the Church’s most honest feast day.

Not the most solemn. Not the most dignified. But possibly the most truthful.

It is the day before Ash Wednesday, which means it is the day when the Church looks you kindly in the eye and says, “Right then. Let’s deal with what’s left in the cupboard.”

Historically, Shrove Tuesday was about being shriven — confessed, absolved, set straight before Lent began. Before ashes. Before fasting. Before good intentions met reality. It was the day for clearing the conscience and the pantry. And if that sounds suspiciously practical, that’s because the Church has always known that the spiritual life tends to begin somewhere between the soul and the stove.

Hence the pancakes.

Butter, eggs, sugar, milk — rich things that wouldn’t keep well through a long fast, and certainly wouldn’t help one cultivate a sober Lenten disposition. Better to use them up. Better still to use them up joyfully. The Church, with remarkable foresight, decided that this could be done with frying pans and a little ceremony.

And so Shrove Tuesday became the one day of the year when the Church says, “Yes, absolutely — flip it, eat it, enjoy it. Tomorrow we repent.”

It’s also the Church’s reminder that preparation matters. Lent does not arrive like a theological ambush. We are given warning. We are given time. We are given a chance to laugh at ourselves, to eat one more pancake than strictly necessary, and to notice what we cling to before we are invited to let anything go.

There is something wonderfully human about this. The Church does not scold us into holiness. It feeds us into it.

Shrove Tuesday acknowledges that self-denial is learned best when it is preceded by gratitude. That repentance makes more sense when it is grounded in joy. That God is not offended by butter, nor shocked by laughter echoing down the parish hall.

And — this is important — it reminds us that Lent is not about punishing ourselves for enjoying good things. It is about learning to enjoy them rightly, lightly, and without mistaking them for God.

So tonight, flip your pancakes. Eat them with joy. Laugh if one lands on the floor. Say your prayers. Confess what needs confessing. Tomorrow, the ashes will come soon enough.

God is not in a hurry.

A Companion Prayer

Gracious God,
you know how fond we are of full plates and fuller lives.
On this Shrove Tuesday, receive our laughter, our mess,
and the things we are reluctant to let go of.
As we clear our cupboards and our consciences,
prepare us for a Lent that is honest, gentle, and real.
Teach us to fast without bitterness,
to repent without despair,
and to walk with you—not grimly, but faithfully—
through all the days you give us.
Amen.

Why God Seems to Prefer the In-Between Days

If there's a single line of footprints in the snow I like to walk on the  opposite step to make it look like one person was hopping : r/funny
God does some of God’s best work in the in-between.

If you read the Gospels carefully, you begin to notice something unsettling: God does an extraordinary amount of work when nothing much seems to be happening.

Most of Jesus’ life is lived between stories. Between miracles. Between sermons. Between great crowds and dramatic moments. And it is there — walking, eating, resting, waiting — that the Kingdom quietly takes root.

The Church reflects this divine preference in her calendar. For every great feast, there are many ordinary days. For every proclamation, there is a long stretch of faithful routine. And just before Lent — a season with very clear instructions — God gives us days with almost none.

This is not inefficiency. It is formation.

Because faith shaped only by high moments becomes brittle. Faith shaped in the in-between becomes resilient. These quiet days teach us how to live without constant spiritual adrenaline — to trust God when nothing is being explained, highlighted, or resolved.

They remind us that God does not disappear when the banners come down.

So if you find yourself in an in-between season — spiritually, emotionally, or seasonally — take heart. You are in excellent company. God seems to prefer these days. They are spacious enough for growth, quiet enough for listening, and honest enough for real faith to take hold.

Nothing may look impressive. And that is precisely the point.

Companion Prayer

God of the ordinary,
meet us in the days without headlines,
in the seasons without clarity,
in the moments that feel unfinished.

Teach us to trust your presence
when nothing much is happening,
and to believe that you are at work
even here.
Especially here.
Amen.