The February Garden: A Pre-Lenten Reflection
The February garden is a sacred place. After the rubble and debris of Autumn’s first frost are cleared away, there falls a deep, expectant silence. What appears barren holds the promise of new life. The parallels to our liturgical year are rich and striking. As we approach Lent, there is a process of stripping bare. We rid our lives of unnecessary entanglements and distractions and withdraw from a world that glorifies activity and self-gratification. In our chaotic culture, times of rest and preparation are undervalued if not disdained. We have an obsession with the overt. I remember when I first came to this realization I was in my first year of medical school. Already, I had to start thinking of ways to build my resume for residency applications. At the time I was voraciously reading books on theology and spirituality. I hungered for truth and community, yet the time spent cultivating character, virtue, and relationship was not something that could be placed on a list of achievements. There was pressure to create an external, visible, and measurable persona, …


