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Season of Lent provides opportunity to pray for peace

3/12/2003 News media contact: Kathy Gilbert · (615) 742-5470 · Nashville, Tenn.

NOTE: A photograph is available with this story.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) - A Native American story tells of a small boy who goes to an elder in his tribe for advice. The boy is struggling because he has a "wolf and a lamb" living inside him. He doesn't know which one to honor. The wise man tells him: "You will honor the one you feed."

"In this time of Lent, let the wolf go hungry and feed the lamb," says Kathleen Flood, a Dominican nun, Order of Preaching, speaking March 5 at an Ash Wednesday service at the United Methodist Scarritt-Bennett Center in Nashville. Scarritt-Bennett is a not-for-profit conference, retreat and educational center owned by the Women's Division of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries.

The analogy of the wolf and the lamb seems especially poignant during this Lent as the world teeters on the edge of war.

The World Council of Churches, a fellowship of more than 300 churches that includes the United Methodist Church, has called upon Christians around the world to use the season of Lent to join in prayers for peace in Iraq.

Prayers written by Christian, Jewish and Muslim clergy used in inter-religious worships during the Gulf War in 1991 can be found on the council's Web site at http://www.wcc-coe.org/wcc/what/international/iraqprayers-e.html.

The Women's Division has launched a campaign called "Christian Women Pray for Peace from Advent to Easter." Women are asked to write a prayer for peace on a postcard and send it to the Board of Global Ministries. On Easter weekend, the Women's Division plans a demonstration for peace and will deliver the postcards to the White House. For more information, go to http://gbgm-umc.org/umw/prayers4peace.html.

Lent began with Ash Wednesday and will end on Easter Sunday, April 20.

This time of year brings a lot of questions about what the United Methodist Church believes and observes for Lent.

"Lent is a very personal time for individuals, so the United Methodist Church does not have official guidelines on how churches should observe Lent," says Mary Lynn Holly, director of InfoServ, United Methodist Communications' information service. "For example, the church does not say everyone has to fast. Sometimes the different ways churches observe Lent causes some confusion and they come to us for help."

A Web page devoted to explanations and resources on Lent and Easter can be found at http://infoserv.umc.org/faq/lenteaster.htm.

The opening page says: "The seasons of Lent and Easter celebrate the most important aspect of Christian life - the redemption and salvation of Christians through the resurrection of Christ. Beginning with Ash Wednesday, Christians around the world anticipate and prepare for Christ's victory over death with fasting, penitence and prayer and ultimately, joy, praise and celebration."

Included on the Web site are links to United Methodist agencies and organizations such as the Board of Discipleship, the Upper Room, Cokesbury and others, as well as many resources for individuals and churches to use during Lent and Easter.

Many people call InfoServ at this time of the year, Holly says. The most frequently asked questions include "Why does Lent last 40 days?" "What is Ash Wednesday?" and "What does it mean to fast?"

In her sermon, Sister Kathleen says God gives us a hint of what is required in Isaiah 58. "The kind of fast God desires is the kind that leaves us hungry for justice."

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