Lenten Prayer Chain
Lent begins on Ash Wednesday and continues until Easter. This Lenten Prayer Chain is a good way to remember to say a prayer every day as you add a link to the chain. There are 40 days in Lent because the Sundays are not counted. In the picture above are a number of ideas and spaces for you to add your own.
Trivia: Viole
Lenten Prayer Chain
Lent begins on Ash Wednesday and continues until Easter. This Lenten Prayer Chain is a good way to remember to say a prayer every day as you add a link to the chain. There are 40 days in Lent because the Sundays are not counted. In the picture above are a number of ideas and spaces for you to add your own.
Trivia: Violet (Purple) representing the mourning for Jesus is the color of Lent and also celebrates his resurrection with the colors of royalty.
Supplies:
Purple construction paper
Printer
Scissors
Staples or glue sticks
Instructions:
Print out a set of prayers for each person.
Add you own special prayers on the blank strips.
Each day add a link to your chain as you say the prayer printed and include the previous prayers.
Making Lent a Meaningful Season
Lent is the season leading up to the Holy Week. For many years the period between Ash Wednesday and Easter Sunday has been honored as the time of “Lent,” marked generally by sacrifice and mindful contemplation. In modern Protestant churches, it can sometimes be tempting to shy away from the practice of Lente
Making Lent a Meaningful Season
Lent is the season leading up to the Holy Week. For many years the period between Ash Wednesday and Easter Sunday has been honored as the time of “Lent,” marked generally by sacrifice and mindful contemplation. In modern Protestant churches, it can sometimes be tempting to shy away from the practice of Lenten observation due to fear of its connection with ritual, legalism, or the Catholic “High church.”
Yet the excitement of Easter loses some of its significance if we focus only on the resurrection and neglect the ministry and suffering of Christ leading up to it. Celebrating a season of Lent can be just as powerful (and more) as honoring Advent, and often enhances the effect of Easter. Through Lent, we reflect upon and honor how Christ was tempted by Satan and overcame. This fact is critically important to us as Christians.
“For since death came through a man, the resurrection of the dead comes also through a man. 2For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive.” (1 Corinthians 15:21-22)
"In the Garden of Eden, man fell sway to temptation and the result was sin and death for all mankind. But in the desert Jesus reversed this. He defied the Devil and proved who He was in God. He suffered in order that we may live; and He suffered in order to empathize with our struggle. 'For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are—yet he did not sin.'” (Hebrews 4:15)
During Lent, we commemorate this experience, but we also consider the entirety of Christ’s life and what He did for us. We also reflect upon our own frailty.
At times we may fall to the mistaken idea that we somehow orchestrate and work to achieve our own salvation. But we can do nothing apart from Jesus, and only in Him can we have hope. Considering this, the season of Lent is certainly not time for legalistic specifications but re-dedicating the heart attitude.
Some facts about Lent:
Ideas for celebrating Lent:
Many people commemorate the season with abstinence of some sort, choosing some sort of favorite item to give up for the forty-day period. This can be a great way to consider and appreciate the work of Christ, and there are many things (food, habits, etc.) we might want to give up or to encourage our youngsters to abandon.
However, it can be just as effective (and even more so) to consider taking on something extra. Perhaps you could adopt a missionary or support an overseas child with prayer or other means. Or maybe there are service opportunities you can sign up to perform. On a personal level, though, it is beneficial to take on spiritual disciplines, dedicating attention to prayer, Bible study, or deeply reflective contemplation. Whatever you opt to do, make certain the attitude and motivation come from deepening understanding of God, rather than just following rules. These principles are important at any age, child and adult alike!
Take a look at the table in the narthex next time you enter the church. There are clipboard packets for you to pick up and enjoy during the church service. Let Pastor Ed or Diana Wright know how you like them or if you have ideas for items we can add to the packets.
The 2023 Guenther Family Scholarship Award Winners
Speed Memorial Church
328 US Route 31, Sellersburg, Indiana 47172, United States
Pastor Ed sulpice * 812-246-3262
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