3/27/26

Pause for Prayer: FRIDAY 3/27

 
Lent is almost over, Lord
(it's Holy Week come Sunday)
and chocolate bunnies, jelly beans
and Peeps are all about...

But set my heart on sweeter gifts,
on food that will not perish:
your word and bread to feed my soul
and fill my heart with peace...
 
The end of Lent finds me in need
of healing, strength and grace, Lord:
through fasting, prayer and mercy's deeds
lead me to Easter's joy...

Amen.

  

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TODAY is a FRIDAY in LENT


 

March 27 is a Friday in Lent...
 
   a day to abstain from eating meat.

What does that mean?  
Catholics over 14 years of age 
are expected to abstain from eating meat 
on the Fridays of Lent.

For more on this topic, check out this earlier post...

Note: Individual, personal health concerns and "doctor's orders" always take precedence over regulations for fast and abstinence!

Fasting in In Lent

All Christians are called to special prayer, fasting and caring for the poor in the season of Lent.

Each person determines how he or she will personally live out these ancient Lenten exercises. 

In addition to personal Lenten practices, Catholics are also called to a communal practice of self-denial by abstaining from meat on Ash Wednesday, the Fridays of Lent and on Good Friday. 

  

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3/26/26

NIGHT PRAYER: Thursday 3/26

 

Late have I loved you, Lord...
- St. Augustine

Lent ends at sundown on Holy Thursday, just a week away (April 2) so we're almost at the end of this holy season...  How have we done this Lent, you and I?  Remember,
it's never too late to begin living Lent...

Not sure I've done a great job this Lent, Lord... I had plenty of good intentions and really high hopes back - but maybe I promised you (and myself) too much...  
 
Maybe I should have been more honest about where I was before making pledges about getting to where I wanted to be...  
 
Maybe I was trying to impress you (or myself) with promises too big to keep...
 
Still, I know: it's never too late... 
 
I look back and realize that if I'd been more modest in my ambition I might be looking at a better Lenten record today... 

I look back and realize that if I'd depended more on you and less on me, I might have been more faithful to my Lenten goals...

But there's no grace in stewing in my failures and I know you, Lord: you're the God of second chances...

I can just feel bad about the time I wasted  - or  -  I can, with new resolve, make the best of the time that's left...

Better that the week ahead be fruitful - than for me to add it to the sketchy weeks behind me...
 
Because I know: it's never too late... 

So, send your Spirit to help me, Lord: to pick me up and dust me off and give me a fresh start for the week that lies ahead...

Send your Spirit to move me to prayer, Lord - even if only for a few minutes each day...  And keep me modest in my promise and faithful in my follow-through...

Send your Spirit to remind me in the morning and at night (or in the afternoon) to pause, slow down, to stop and rest with you for a few minutes - for a chat, for some time to share my heart with you, time to share my sorrows and my joys, my hopes and disappointments...  

Send your Spirit, Lord, to help me fast: to empty my body, my belly, my pockets, my imagination and my mind - of what I don't need, of what I have too much of; of what's not good or healthy or helpful for me; of possessions that, in fact, own me; and of good things, too, whose sacrifice might sharpen my hunger, thirst and taste for even greater gifts... 

Send your Spirit, Lord, to move me to mercy: mercy in my words, mercy in my thoughts; mercy in my deeds, mercy in my stubborn heart; mercy in my attitudes, mercy in my gratitude; mercy in my grudges, mercy in my resentments; mercy in my giving to the poor:  all in this season of your mercy, Lord - your boundless, bountiful mercy for all - and for me, a sinner, who needs your mercy daily...

I have a week of Lent left, Lord, and I offer it to you and pray you make of it a time of grace and growth as I prepare to celebrate your suffering, death and rising in the peace of Easter joy...
 
Because I know: it's never too late...

In the quiet of my prayer tonight, Lord, open my heart to this last week of Lent and help me make a modest pledge to pray, to sacrifice and to serve the poor  - all in your name...

Just one week left in Lent, Lord: with your grace, help me make the best of it... 
 
Help me believe, Lord: it's never too late... 
 
Protect me, Lord, while I'm awake
    and watch over me while I sleep
that awake, I might keep watch with you
    and asleep, rest in your peace... 

Amen.      
 
It's Never Too Late by Panam Percy Paul 
  
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When all your hope is gone 
   and there's nowhere to turn, 
it'll be alright 
Though darkness surrounds 
   your way everyday, 
it'll be alright 
When all your friends are gone 
   and there's nowhere to turn, 
it's never too late for Jesus 
Though darkness surrounds 
   your way everyday, 
it's never too late for Jesus 
 
Never too late, He is there when you call 
Never too late, He will break every wall 
Never too late when you call on Jesus 
Never too late for Him 
 
He will be your light in your darkest night 
It's never too late oh Never too late for Jesus 
 
It's never too late, it'll be alright 
It's never too late, it'll be alright...
 
It's never too late, it'll be alright 
It's never too late, it'll be alright 
But your body is so weak, 
   and you think you will die 
It's never too late for Jesus 
 
Though you think you are so poor, 
you've got no place to lie
It's never too late for Jesus 
 
Never too late, He is there when you call 
Never too late, He will break every wall 
Never too late when you call on Jesus 
Never too late for Him 
 
He will be your light in your darkest night 
It's never too late oh Never too late for Jesus 
 
It's never too late, it'll be alright 
It's never too late, it'll be alright..
 

  

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Pause for Prayer: THURSDAY 3/26

    Image source

Back on Ash Wednesday, Lord,
I began with the hope and the prayer
that this Lent I'd come back to you
with all my heart...

With all my heart...

Well, maybe in some ways, Lord
- but I haven't yet returned to you
     
with all my heart...

There are still parts of my heart
    I shield and protect,
sometimes holding on
    to what I need to set free and let go:
        long held hurts and grudges;
        unhealed pain I cling to;
        anger now grown old and cold,
        chilling the warmth within me...

And still there are my heart's old habits:
    faults I'd like to think are gone
but which with painful regularity
    show their face when least expected,
when I'm least prepare
    to meet and overcome them...

I've come back in some ways, Lord,
    but I haven't yet returned to you
        with all my heart...

So in these last days of Lent, Lord,
I invite you to come into my heart:
    come in and heal my heart,
    come in and cleanse my heart,
    come in and change my heart,
    come in and warm my heart,
    come make your home within me...

I pray for this because
    yours is the mercy I so much need,
    you make pure what deeply stains,
    you can change what I can't move,
    you melt the frost that chills my soul,
    you dwell in me with love I don't deserve...

So help me make my way home to you, Lord,
    help me come back to you 
        with all my heart... 

 

  

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3/25/26

NIGHT PRAYER: Wednesday 3/25

A good way to pray with scripture is to imagine yourself as one of the characters in the story, in the scene, and to ponder what you might say or do, what you might experience from that character’s point of view as the story unfolds.

For tonight's prayer, I'll share just such a reflection,  from writer and artist, Jan Richardson.  She takes today'sgospel for the feast of the Annunciation and imagines herself to be the angel, Gabriel, who comes to tell Mary she’ll be the mother of Jesus.
 
My reflection follows after Jan's prayer.

You might want to close your eyes and imagine, for a few moments, that you are the angel Gabriel, just about to enter Mary’s house…

Gabriel’s Annunciation
 
For a moment
I hesitated
on the threshold.

For the space
of a breath
I paused,
unwilling to disturb
her last ordinary moment,
knowing that the next step
would cleave her life:
that this day
would slice her story
in two,
dividing all the days before
from all the ones
to come.

The artists would later
depict the scene:
Mary dazzled
by the archangel,
her head bowed
in humble assent,
awed by the messenger
who condescended
to leave paradise
to bestow such an honor
upon a woman, and mortal.

Yet I tell you
it was I who was dazzled,
I who found myself agape
when I came upon her—
reading, at the loom, in the kitchen,
I cannot now recall;
only that the woman before me—
blessed and full of grace
long before I called her so—
shimmered with how completely
she inhabited herself,
inhabited the space around her,
inhabited the moment
that hung between us.

I wanted to save her
from what I had been sent
to say.

Yet when the time came,
when I had stammered
the invitation
(history would not record
the sweat on my brow,
the pounding of my heart;
would not note
that I said
Do not be afraid
to myself as much as
to her)
it was she
who saved me—
her first deliverance—
her Let it be
not just declaration
to the Divine
but a word of solace,
of soothing,
of benediction

for the angel
in the doorway
who would hesitate
one last time—
just for the space
of a breath
torn from his chest—
before wrenching himself away
from her radiant consent,
her beautiful and
awful yes.
 

§ § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § § §

That’s a beautiful reflection, isn’t it?
But maybe like me, 
you have a hard time imagining yourself as an angel!

In the scriptures, angels are messengers from God:
they come to deliver a word, a warning 
or an invitation from God
and I have no doubt that God's always messaging me.
 
God is, if you will, always texting me,
sending a word, a message of wisdom, 
some timely warning, an invitation or a challenge
to something new and life-giving...

These messages come to me in many ways
    - just about never through an “angel in the doorway” -
but rather, in reflective moments of prayer,
in listening carefully to what others say,
in paying attention to my conscience,
in hearing the scriptures at Mass,
in the beauty of creation all around me,
occasionally in a dream, 
much more often in the shower
or when I take the time to slow down, be at peace,
and, like Mary, truly inhabit the space I'm in,
the moment at hand...

I believe there’s not a moment in any day or night,
whether I’m awake or asleep, 
when God isn’t messaging me,
speaking to me, offering me wise counsel
and inviting me to a deeper relationship with him.

And I believe the same is true for every one of us!

Of course, we’re not always tuned in.   
We’re often preoccupied.
We might be too busy to listen or pay attention. 
And sometimes, we don’t even want to know
what God’s message to us might be.
 
But at this time of the year, two things are true.

    1) God wants to use the season of Lent
    to get a message through to each of us.
    I don’t know what that is for you
    but I have an inkling of what it is for me.

    2) Whatever else might be happening in our lives,
    Lent might find us a little more open than usual
    to wondering, pondering, listening for
    the message, the word, the warning,  
    the comfort, the challenge, the invitation
    God may be sending us.

Mary stopped whatever she was doing
and listened to Gabriel
and to the message the angel delivered. 
 
She “inhabited” the moment, 
she opened her heart and listened
and she paid attention,
not in her yesterdays, not in  her tomorrows
- but in the moment.
 
And she heard God’s word to her, 
a word of love and invitation
to a life of intimacy with the person of Jesus...
 
God’s word to each of us will be different 
because each of us needs to hear a different word,
a personal message, from God...
 
So...  let's pray for the grace this Lent
    to stop the busyness,
    to inhabit, to live in the moment,
    to listen and pray 
    and then listen some more
    and maybe even
        - to look for an angel in the doorway...
 
Protect us, Lord, while we're awake
    and watch over us while we sleep
that awake, we might keep watch with you
    and asleep, rest in your peace...

Amen.

The music for tonight is Franz Biebl's  exquisite Ave Maria, flawlessly performed by Chanticleer.  Composed in 1964, Biebl intersperses the Ave with the three verses of the Angelus prayer, all of which captures the scene of Gabriel and Mary at the Annunciation.  Scroll down for the lyrics in Latin and English.  I hope you'll take the time to listen and to pray...   

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Angelus Domini, nuntiavit Mariae,
et concepit de Spiritu Sancto.

    The angel of the Lord declared unto Mary
    and she conceived of the Holy Spirit.

Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum;
benedicta tu in mulieribus
et benedictus fructus ventris tui Jesus.   

    Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with you;
    blessed are you among women
    and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus.

Maria dixit, ecce ancilla Domini,
fiat mihi secundum verbum tuum.

    Mary said: behold the servant of the Lord,
    let it be done to me according to your word.


Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum;
benedicta tu in mulieribus
et benedictus fructus ventris tui Jesu.

    Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with you;
    blessed are you among women
    and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus.

Et verbum caro factum est,
et habitavit in nobis.
 

    And the word became flesh
    and dwelled among us.   

Ave Maria, gratia plena, Dominus tecum;
benedicta tu in mulieribus
et benedictus fructus ventris tui Jesu.
Sancta Maria, mater Dei,
ora pro nobis peccatoribus
nunc et in hora mortis nostrae. Amen.

    Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with you;
    blessed are you among women
    and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus.
    Holy Mary, mother of God,
    pray for us, sinners,
    now and at the hour of our death.  Amen.


  

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