Monday, February 4, 2008

The Great Lent, Our traditions and our next generations

The Great Lent, Our traditions and our next generations

As we enter yet another Great Lent, it might be a good idea to ask ourselves and our children: how prepared are we for this great lent? How will we do during this great lent? Will we be successful in resisting the temptations to do the things that we gave up at the beginning of the great lent? Will we be any closer to Jesus? Will we take the extra time to pray? Will we pray for the less fortunate?...

Our church has a very rich tradition of special lent prayers, kumbidal and other traditions during the Great Lent. The special prayers during the great Lent have a lot of meaning in each word that is included in it. Our grand parents and our parents used to follow these with great
importance. As we disintegrate into nuclear families, will these traditions be handed over to the next generations? The more important question is: do we ourselves pray these special prayers, thereby giving our children a chance to hear these and learn these? Or do we think it's not important to pray these? Or even assume that the next generation is not going to be interested in it.

We must do everything to pass on these traditions to our next generations. If language if the only barrier, we must work to overcome it. It might be my ignorance, but I am not sure if there are English versions of these prayers for the children that do not know Malayalam.

Also, the great Lent is the time to build the character of our next generation to share and care for others. They must pray and help their less fortunate friends who are orphans and helpless.

In addition to our families, our Sunday schools and other spiritual organization's must take a proactive approach in passing on these valuable traditions to the next generation. We have to be positive in our thoughts that the next generation will be interested in these. It does not hurt to give it to try. I am sure our children will appreciate receiving these traditions.

Two years ago, at our Sunday school at St. Gregorios Church, Austin, TX, we created a guide called the Great Lent guide with some special lent prayers translated into English and made it interesting to the kids by adding activities for them every day of the 50 days of the Great Lent. We also used this guide to make them aware of the orphanages our church has. Each day was assigned to a charitable organization, and the kids would pay for them on that day. The children were really interested and excited to use this guide and hence we again did the same last year. The point that I'm trying to make here is that if we spend the energy and effort to make it interesting and informative for them, they will surely appreciate it.

If anyone is interested, please feel free to download this guide from our website [ www.stgregoriosaustin.org ] under the title 'The Great Lent Guide'. There are no copyrights, nor do we need any acknowledgments. Please feel free to change the church name as you need. A generation that strongly believes in our rich traditions and embraces the culture of caring and sharing is the biggest acknowledgment that one can ever dream of. May this Great lent help us
get closer to Jesus.

Thanks,
Rajesh Vargheese
Austin, TX

(ICON repost from 2007)