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Updated: Mar 6, 2023


What makes Lent feel different?


At Mass, the changes are subtle, but they're definitely noticeable. The colors of the vestments and altar cloths change from green to purple. There are fewer decorations. The music is a little different, too, somehow...maybe a bit quieter and more subdued. We bury the Alleluia until Easter, and we leave out the Gloria during Lent– it reappears briefly at the beginning of Triduum, on Holy Thursday, and then disappears again until Easter Vigil.


These changes are invitations to us - an opportunity to pray more deeply, to notice God's presence among us in a way that feels a little different than it does when all the stops are pulled out on the organ and we're singing our biggest, most celebratory hymns. There's a place for big extravagant music and lush flowers and rich, ornamented Mass settings. But during Lent, we are invited to go back to the basics: a simple melody that our voices sing together, a sense of quiet purpose in our music and in our prayer.


It's not just Mass that feels different. Our lives can feel different, too. As we look for opportunities for more prayer, to serve others with works of mercy, and to give up things that might get in the way of our relationship with God, maybe we need a different soundtrack for regular life, too - not just at church.


As we begin this Lent together, here's a playlist of songs to accompany us in our day-to-day living.



  • abbeydupuy

Here in Minnesota, this year has gotten off to a snowy start. We have big piles of snow on the sides of our roads and driveways, and mountains of it rise out of the center of parking lots all over town. When there's snowy weather, the temperatures are a little higher, but the clouds are always with us...it almost feels like the sun forgot where we live and never comes to visit any more. And is there anything less lovely than old, grey, dirty snow?


At times like this, it can be easy to focus on the small irritations of daily life and to let the gloomy grey of winter drag us down. Life is never easy, but it feels harder to be cheerful about things when the nights are long and the days are covered in clouds.


I've been listening to an arrangement of Psalm 62 lately by composer Wendell Kimbrough. It begins:

For God alone I wait in silence
My soul is still before the Lord
He is my rock and my salvation
My fortress strong, I'll trust in him
I'll not be shaken
I'll not be shaken
For all my hope is in his love
From God alone is my salvation
I'll wait and trust his steadfast love

This has been my song on repeat, in my car and in my head these last few weeks. As we wait to see the sun, as we wait to see what the new year will bring, as we work through the big and small challenges of our lives, God's love is constant, steady, and unwavering. We can rest on that knowledge, as firm and solid as our feet on a rock.



  • abbeydupuy

We've made it around the circle again to the beginning of a new liturgical year. It's time, the Scripture readings are telling us: time to wake from sleep, time to put aside the deeds of darkness and time to put on the armor of light, time to be alert and watchful.


Time to wait.


This time of year always carries a certain amount of contradiction with it. We're anticipating the birth of Jesus at Christmas, so we're getting ready. Of course, Jesus was already born over two thousand years ago...but each year at this time, we remember the events leading up to his birth and the prophets who foretold it. We're anticipating the second coming of Christ, when Jesus will return to earth to bring his kingdom to its fullness...so we get all those apocalyptic-sounding readings about not knowing the day or the hour when the Master will return.


If your family is anything like ours, you're also doing a fair amount of holiday stuff already...rehearsals, Christmas plays and concerts, shopping, baking, get-togethers, and all the other wonderful things that make this time of year seem so special. Sometimes, holding the waiting in tension with the already-doing can feel like an impossible challenge. At best, we end up making some compromises we can live with (sure, we'll wear Christmas pajamas to watch the Thanksgiving Day parade before we've even put up our Advent wreath!) and reminding ourselves that there's no perfect way to do this Advent thing.


Already, but not yet. Emmanuel, God-with-us, is on the way...and also as close as our next breath.


While we're waiting, how about some hopeful and expectant music for the season? Enjoy this playlist for Advent while you prepare for the birth of Jesus and the coming of his kingdom.



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