Remember, You are Dust . . . 03/09/2011
“ Although the life of a monk ought to have about it at all times the character of a Lenten observance, yet since few have the virtue for that, we therefore urge that during the actual days of Lent the brethren keep their lives most pure and at the same time wash away during these holy days all the negligences of other times. And this will be worthily done if we restrain ourselves from all vices and give ourselves up to prayer with tears, to reading, to compunction of heart and to abstinence.” _ Rule of St. Benedict, Chapter 49 “There’s dirt on your forehead.” I used to make that comment to some of my friends in college. Not having been raised in a liturgical church, I had no idea it was Ash Wednesday. When I was informed their foreheads were covered with ash, and not dirt, I didn’t see the point of all the mess. Since those college years, I’ve had a change of heart. When my congregation began to hold Ash Wednesday services, I went out of curiosity. I continued to go, because those services, and the other special Lenten observances, began to move me quite deeply. In them, God voice began to break through to my heart. Three years after the services began, I finally stopped running from God’s call on Easter Sunday. I firmly believe the Lenten observance had a great deal to do with my becoming open to God's call to pastoral ministry. Today is Ash Wednesday. When we receive ashes today, we acknowledge that God formed us from dust and that to dust we will return. In other words, we declare our complete dependence on God. We also visibly acknowledge that as human beings we are sinners and that we are sorry for our sin. Our wearing ashes also declares to God, and to our sisters and brothers, that we humbly ask God’s help in turning our lives around. This Ash Wednesday is also an opportunity to dedicate ourselves to live a holy Lent; a Lent in which we can examine our past as congregations, as pastors, and as congregants,, and search for the path where God leads us into the future. I pray you’ll join in this ritual at your local congregation this Ash Wednesday. Go if you’re merely curious. Go if you’d like to explore a tradition of repentance from the ancient history of Christ’s church. But above all go, if you’d like to begin a Lenten journey with the intent of deepening your relationship with our Creator. Add Comment Journey to Easter 03/23/2009
During Holy Week, the second week in April, darkness will fall at St. Benedict's Abbey, the abbey where I am an Oblate. On Good Friday all lights will be extinguished, and the monks will raise their cowls over their heads, a sign that they have entered the Great Silence. No voice will be heard, no bell will ring, no light of any kind will pierce the darkness until Easter morning. | Custom Search Pastor Frank
My name is Frank Fisher. I’m a native of a small town in Missouri, I spent my adolescence in Madison, Wisconsin, and ever since I entered college I’ve been a resident of Illinois. When I began college, I intended to enter pastoral ministry. Instead, I was diverted into a thirty year career with the Chicago Fire Department. I was ordained to an interim pastorate in the year 2000, and am now serving in my eighth interim. Many of you may wonder about the letters, "Obl OSB" that follow my name. The short explanation is that they mean I'm an Oblate of the Abbey of John the Baptist and Saint Benedict, an ecumenical Abbey located in Bartonville, Illinois. An Oblate is someone who has promised to follow the rule of Saint Benedict in their lives up to the point where their position in life makes following the rule impossible. CategoriesAll ArchivesJuly 2011 |