The fun may be over….

Indulgence was the word yesterday, today it is repentance!  With Ash Wednesday brings the beginning of the 40 days of Lent.  Does this mean we roam around in somber, depressed solitude?  No.  In fact, we are instructed by Jesus to do quite the opposite, “When you fast, do not look somber as the hypocrites do, for they disfigure their faces to show men they are fasting. I tell you the truth, they have received their reward in full.”  (Matthew 6:16, NIV)  We are instructed to pray in solitude (Matthew 6:5), do good things for others with notice (Matthew 6:1), fast without advertisement (Matthew 6:16), store up treasures in heaven (Matthew 6:20), don’t worry (Matthew 6:25), don’t judge others (Matthew 7:1), pray some more (Matthew 7:7), and the list continues.  In short, we are to live for this season, not get through it.

Live for Lent, instead of trying to get through it

The above list of instructions does, indeed, seem endless.  There is a common denominator to make all of them achievable: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind…Love your neighbor as yourself.” (Matthew 22:37-39)

Love God

Spend time daily with God in prayer.

List His attributes (love, powerful, almighty, creator), thank Him for blessings, ask forgiveness for your sins, and ask for His help.

Select something to give up (chocolate, carbonated drinks, bread, gossip), and abstain from it until Easter.  Do this without letting on that you are “working” on this little exercise.  In other words, self control, the tenth fruit of the Spirit. (Galatians 5:22)  You will master self control for abstaining, and from running your mouth and complaining about it.

Love others

Pray for other people before you pray for yourself.

As you pray for those close to you, identify one to bless in some way, anonymously, or not.  In certain situations the blessing may be only meaningful if your identity is known.

“Pay it forward” for someone at Starbucks!

Gather canned goods and toilettries on your next trip to the grocery store to take them to your local food pantry.

Serve at a food pantry.

Take time to be one on one with your child in a new way.

Listen to your spouse carefully to learn something you can do to show your love and attention to him or her.

Prepare for the Party!

Smile!  Although Lent is a season of repentance, it is also a time of preparation for a celebration.  When you prepare for a party, I hope you do the work necessary for the event in joy and excitement.  Lent can be viewed much the same way.  We are preparing ourselves, our hearts, for the celebration of Easter, the Resurrection.  Reflecting on the days preceding the Crucifixion are truly painful, and must be considered this way.  In this pain we also now know the forgiveness available to us because of the pain He endured.  For this grace we may rejoice!  Here are some ways to prepare yourself:

Read scripture daily.  “Daily Office” (scripture prescribed for most Protestant churches): http://www.esvbible.org/devotions/bcp/

Add an edifying habit to your routine. Read a good book, start a new exercise method, read a scripture passage to you family at breakfast each morning, park in the farthest parking spot and walk!  It doesn’t have to Pulitzer Prize-worthy, just something good.

Ask God to change your will to be His will.  This is the hardest one to do because you really have to mean it, and mean to be changed.  Once you start asking God what He thinks, what is His will, how He wants you do do things, instead of giving Him a list to complete for you, you will notice a change not only in yourself, but how you see, and feel about everything around you.

The fun may be over in the life you lead before today.  The new ways to experience the life you lead in the future will have a label much better than “fun”.

Live for Lent, instead of trying to get through it.

Fat Tuesday=Mardi Gras=Carnival, which all lead to Lent

Royalty goes to new levels when Mardi Gras season hits. We have Mardi Gras Kings, Queens, Princesses and Duchesses crowned in festivals across the former Confederate States annually, as well as the grand Carnival celebrations in Europe and Latin America.  Today is “Fat Tuesday”, the eve of the Mardi Gras, and the beginning of Lent in the Church calendar.  How do all of these labels coincide?  Here is a list of definitions:

Lent is the Christian season of preparation prior to Easter Sunday.  The 40 day preparation includes reflection, repentance, fasting, and discipline for the purpose of identifying with, giving thanks for, and submitting to the sacrifice of Jesus Christ as our Savior.

Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent.  Many “give up” eating certain comfort foods, or doing certain “extravagant” activities in order to penitentially identify with Christ and His sacrifice.

Fat Tuesday is the last day (day before Ash Wednesday) to live it up before giving up your creature comforts!

Mardi Gras is the French literal translation for Fat Tuesday.

Shrove Tuesday is also another term for Fat Tuesday or Mardi Gras.  Shrove is past tense for Shrive, meaning to hear confession, assign penance, and absolve from sin.  In other words, Shrove Tuesday reminds the Christian that he or she is entering a season of repentance.

Pancake Day is ALSO the same meaning for infamous Tuesday in question!  The contents of pancakes (fat, butter and eggs) were all forbidden foods during Lent.  Great Britain marks Mardi Gras with big plates of pancakes instead of parades and society balls.  But, they are the model for Royalty after all!

Carnival is Latin for “farewell to the flesh”.

Now that we have our definitions in place, let’s explore a few of the celebrations on this Fat Tuesday!

Mardi Gras in New Orleans was a rolling celebration by the 1730’s, with eight elegant society balls established by the then Governor to mark the season.  It was decades later when the colorful parades began in the streets of New Orleans.  Mobile, Alabama hosted the first Mardi Gras in America in 1703.

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2014 Carnival Court, Rex Organization
rexorganization.com

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2014 King and Queen of Carnival
rexorganization.com

Mardi Gras in Galveston began prior to the Lenten season 1867, just two years after the Civil War.  Young ladies from across the South were invited to be apart of the “royal court” in celebration of the King and Queen of Frivolity for the Krewe, the Knights of Momus.  World War II brought a halt to celebrations across our nation, and even the end of the war could not successfully revive the merriment of Galveston Mardi Gras.  An attempt to bring back the regal Coronations of King Frivolous occurred in the late 1940’s, but the practice would sleep for a few more decades.  In the early 1980’s a small group of men revived the Knights of Momus, and society’s daughters were once again invited be presented in a royal court wearing gowns fit for a queen.  In fact, John Spencer, one of the men who brought life back to the Knights of Momus, arranged for Queen Elizabeth II’s (yes, the real Queen) dress maker to create the elaborate gowns for the first court of the new Galveston Mardi Gras era in 1984 at the historic Galveston Opera House.

King Frivolous XXV, Mr. Harry Black, and his Queen, Miss Margie Beth Spiller, 1949 http://rosenberg-library-museum.org

King Frivolous XXV, Mr. Harry Black, and his Queen, Miss Margie Beth Spiller, 1949
http://rosenberg-library-museum.org

Gown for Margie Beth Spiller, the “Queen of Galveston’s last Mardi Gras” in 1949 http://rosenberg-library-museum.org

Gown for Margie Beth Spiller, the “Queen of Galveston’s last Mardi Gras” in 1949
http://rosenberg-library-museum.org

2012 King and Queen for the Knights of Momus www.houston.culturemap.com

2012 King and Queen for the Knights of Momus
http://www.houston.culturemap.com

2012 Duchesses in the Knights of Momus Coronation Court houston.culturemap.com

2012 Duchesses in the Knights of Momus Coronation Court
houston.culturemap.com

Across Europe, throughout the Southern United States, and permeating Latin America, Mardi Gras/Fat Tuesday/Carnival will be celebrated in elaborate, frivolous style tonight, while Great Britain will celebrate with pancakes.  How will you mark the beginning of the Christian season of Lent?  More importantly, how will you mark the next 40 days in preparation for observing Easter?

Laissez les bons temps rouler!  (At least until tomorrow morning!)