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MARCH 5<br />

A SALVIFIC SADNESS<br />

“By the rivers of Babylon—there we sat down and there we wept when we<br />

remembered Zion. On the willows there we hung up our harps. For there<br />

our captors asked us for songs, and our tormentors asked for mirth, saying,<br />

‘Sing us one of the songs of Zion!’ How could we sing the Lord’s song in a<br />

foreign land? If I forget you, O Jerusalem, let my right hand wither!” (Ps<br />

136/137: 1-5)<br />

This Psalm, which expresses the sadness of the Jewish people in exile<br />

after the Babylonian conquest of Jesrusalem in 607 BC, is sung at<br />

Byzantine matins on the three Sundays preceding Lent. It prepares us for<br />

the voluntary “exile” of Lent, during which we focus in a special way on<br />

the sadness and yearning of humanity after Adam’s “exile” from paradise,<br />

and before the coming of The Awaited One, Jesus Christ. On the weekdays<br />

of Lent, for example, we “abstain” from celebrating the joyous service of<br />

Divine Liturgy, and thus “hang up our harps” for most of the week.<br />

Today let me not hesitate to recognize my human sadness, my yearning<br />

to “come home” to my Father’s land of perfect harmony, peace, and unity.<br />

Let me not slip into self-contentment and imagined self-sufficiency,<br />

which is the kiss of death to spiritual growth and thirst. Today let me<br />

“remember” the heavenly Jerusalem, from which I distance myself, again<br />

and again, amidst my responsibilities and relationships. I need not cover<br />

this up in “songs” and “mirth,” as I prepare for Lent, but rather take some<br />

time to “sit down,” to “weep,” and to “remember Zion.”<br />

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