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A Modern Lent
by Fr. Stephen Freeman
Source: https://glory2godforallthings.com/2026/02/20/a-modern-lent-4/
Few things are as difficult in the modern world as fasting. It is not
simply the action of changing our eating habits that we find problematic
- it’s the whole concept of fasting and what it truly entails. It
comes from another world.
We understand dieting - changing how we eat in order to improve
how we look or how we feel. But changing how we eat in order to know God
or to rightly keep a feast of the Church - this is foreign. Our first
question is often, “How does that work?” For we live in a culture of utility -
we want to know the use of things. Underneath the question of
utility is the demand that something make sense to me, and that I be
able to ultimately take charge of it, use it as I see fit and shape it
according to my own desires. Perhaps the fast could be improved?
Our modern self-understanding sees people primarily as individual
centers of choice and decision. A person is seen as the product of their
choices and decisions - our lives are self-authenticated. As such, we
are managers.
Of course there are many problems with this world-view from the
perspective of Classical Christianity. Though we are free to make
choices and decisions, our freedom is not unlimited. The largest part of
our lives is not self-determined. Much of the rhetoric of modernity is
aimed towards those with wealth and power. It privileges their stories
and mocks the weakness of those without power with promises that are
rarely, if ever, fulfilled.
Our lives are a gift from God and not of our own making. The Classical
Christian spiritual life is not marked by choice and self-determination:
it is characterized by self-emptying and the way of the Cross.
When a modern Christian confronts the season of Lent - the question
often becomes: “What do I want to give up for Lent?” The intention is
good, but the question is wrong. Lent quickly becomes yet another
life-choice, a consumer’s fast.
The practice of the traditional fast has been greatly diminished over
the past few centuries. The Catholic Church has modified its
requirements and streamlined Lenten fasting (today it includes only
abstaining from meat on the Fridays of Lent - which makes them similar
to all the other Fridays of the year). The Protestant Churches that
observe the season of Lent offer no formal guidelines for Lenten
practice. The individual is left on their own.
Orthodoxy continues to have in place the full traditional fast, which is
frequently modified in its application (the “rules” themselves are
generally recognized as written for monastics). It is essentially a
vegan diet (no meat, fish, wine, dairy). Some limit the number of meals
and their manner of cooking. Of course, having the fast in place and
“keeping the fast” are two very different things. I know of no study on
how Orthodox in the modern world actually fast. My pastoral
experience tells me that people generally make a good effort
Does any of this matter? Why should Christians in the modern world
concern themselves with a traditional practice?
What is at stake in the modern world is our humanity. The notion
that we are self-authenticating individuals is simply false. We
obviously do not bring ourselves into existence - it is a gift. And the
larger part of what constitutes our lives is simply a given - a gift. It
is not always a gift that someone is happy with - we would like
ourselves to be other than we are. But the myth of the modern world is
that we, in fact, do create ourselves and our lives - our identities are
imagined to be of our own making. We are only who we choose to be. It is
a myth that is extremely well-suited for undergirding a culture built on
consumption. Identity can be had at a price. The wealthy have a far
greater range of identities available to them - the poor are largely
stuck with being who they really are.
But the only truly authentic human life is the one we receive as a gift
from God. The spirituality of choice and consumption under the guise of
freedom is an emptiness. The identity we create is an ephemera, a
product of imagination and the market. The habits of the marketplace
serve to enslave us - Lent is a call to freedom.
A Modern Lent
Thus, a beginning for a modern Lent is to repent from the modern
world itself. By this, I mean renouncing the notion that you are a
self-generated, self-authenticating individual. You are not defined
by your choices and decisions, much less by your career and your
shopping. You begin by acknowledging that God alone is Lord (and you are
not). Your life has meaning and purpose only in relation to God.
The most fundamental practice of such God-centered living is the giving
of thanks.
·
Renounce trying to improve yourself and become something. You
are not a work in progress. If you are a work - then you are God’s work.
“For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works,
which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in” (Eph 2:10).
·
Do not plan to have a “good Lent” or imagine what a “good Lent” would
be. Give
up judging - especially judging yourself. Get out of the center of your
world. Lent is not about you. It is about Christ and His Pascha.
·
Fast according to the Tradition instead of according to your own ideas
and designs. This
might be hard for some if they are not part of the traditional Church
and thus have no fasting tradition. Most Catholics have differing rules
for fasting than the Orthodox. If you’re Catholic, fast like a Catholic.
Don’t admire other people’s fasting.
·
Pray. Fasting
without praying is called “the Fast of Demons,” because demons never
eat, but they never pray. We fast as a means of drawing closer to God.
Your fasting and your prayer should be balanced as much as possible. If
you fast in a strict manner, then you should pray for extended periods.
If you fast lightly, then your prayers may be lighter as well. The point
is to be single - for prayer and fasting to be a single thing.
·
To our prayer and fasting should be added mercy (giving
stuff away, especially money). You cannot be too generous. Your mercy
should be as invisible as possible to others, except in your kindness to
all.
Spend less, give away more.
·
Eating, drinking, praying and generosity are very natural activities.
Look at your life. How natural is your eating? Is your diet driven by
manufactured, processed foods (especially as served in restaurants and
fast food places)? These can be very inhuman ways of eating. Eating
should take time. It is not a waste of time to spend as much as
six hours in twenty-four preparing, sharing, eating and cleaning up.
Even animals take time to eat.
·
Go to Church a lot more (if
your Church has additional Lenten services, go to them). This can be
problematic for Protestants, in that most Protestant worship is quite
modern, i.e. focused on the individual rather than directed to God;
well-meant but antithetical to worship. If your Church isn’t boring,
it’s probably modern. This is not to say that Classical Christianity is
inherently boring - it’s just experienced as such by people trained to
be consumers. Classical Christianity worships according to Tradition and
focuses its attention on God. It is not there for you to “get something
out of it.”
·
Entertain yourself less. In
traditional Orthodox lands, amusements are often given up during the
Lenten period. This can be very difficult for modern people in that we
live to consume and are thus caught in a cycle of pain and pleasure.
Normal pleasures such as exercise or walking are not what I have in mind
- although it strikes me as altogether modern that there should be
businesses dedicated to helping us do something normal (like walking or
exercising), such that even our normal activities become a commodity to
consume.
·
Fast from watching/reading the news and having/expressing opinions. The
news is not presented in order to keep you informed. It is often
inaccurate and serves the primary purpose of political propaganda and
consumer frenzy. Neither are good for the soul. Opinions can be deeply
destructive to the soul’s health. Most opinions are not properly
considered, necessary beliefs. They are passions that pass
themselves off as thoughts or beliefs. The need to express them
reveals their passionate nature. Though opinions are a necessary part of
life - they easily come to dominate us. Reducing the need to express how
we feel about everything that comes our way (as opposed to silently
weighing and considering and patiently speaking what we know to be true)
is an important part of ascesis and self-control.
I could well imagine that a modern person, reading through such a list,
might feel overwhelmed and wonder what is left. What is left is being human.
That so much in our lives is not particularly human but an ephemeral
distraction goes far to explain much of our exhaustion and anxiety.
There is no food for us in what is not human.
And so the words of Isaiah come to mind:
Article published in English on: 21-02-2026.
Last update: 21-02-2026.