Some devotional resources for Lent

In addition to our video for Station of the Cross, we commend to your reading these articles that also appear on our website, but which may be difficult to find because of more recent posts:

Prayer to Our Lady of Mount Carmel;

A prayer in time of great sickness and mortality (posted during the COVID epidemic, but still a salutary reminder of our own mortality).

Watch for more as Lent progresses.

The Stations of the Cross

Can’t be present on Friday nights at 6 o’clock to pray the Stations of the Cross with Saint Michael’s? Join Father Fraser here as he leads us in this most beautiful series of prayers to help us on our Lenten Journey.

Please note: This video was produced during the COVID restrictions and mentions being unable to gather together to pray the Stations. This is not the case this year. Stations of the Cross will be prayed on Friday evenings during Lent at 6 o’clock. If you are able to join us in person we will welcome you.

A Palm Sunday Reading from St. Andrew of Crete

Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord. Blessed is the King of Israel.

Let us go together to meet Christ on the Mount of Olives. Today he returns from Bethany and proceeds of his own free will toward his holy and blessed passion, to consummate the mystery of our salvation. He who came down from heaven to raise us from the depths of sin, to raise us with himself, we are told in Scripture, above every sovereignty, authority and power, and every other name that can be named, now comes of his own free will to make his journey to Jerusalem. He comes without pomp or ostentation. As the psalmist says: He will not dispute or raise his voice to make it heard in the streets. He will be meek and humble, and he will make his entry in simplicity.

Let us run to accompany him as he hastens toward his passion, and imitate those who met him then, not by covering his path with garments, olive branches or palms, but by doing all we can to prostrate ourselves before him by being humble and by trying to live as he would wish. Then we shall be able to receive the Word at his coming, and God, whom no limits can contain, will be within us.

In his humility Christ entered the dark regions of our fallen world and he is glad that he became so humble for our sake, glad that he came and lived among us and shared in our nature in order to raise us up again to himself. And even though we are told that he has now ascended above the highest heavens – the proof, surely, of his power and godhead – his love for man will never rest until he has raised our earthbound nature from glory to glory, and made it one with his own in heaven.

So let us spread before his feet, not garments or soulless olive branches, which delight the eye for a few hours and then wither, but ourselves, clothed in his grace, or rather, clothed completely in him. We who have been baptized into Christ must ourselves be the garments that we spread before him. Now that the crimson stains of our sins have been washed away in the saving waters of baptism and we have become white as pure wool, let us present the conqueror of death, not with mere branches of palms but with the real rewards of his victory. Let our souls take the place of the welcoming branches as we join today in the children’s holy song: Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord. Blessed is the king of Israel.

-From a sermon by Saint Andrew of Crete, bishop

The Lenten Prayer of Righteous Ephrem the Syrian

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O Lord and Master of my life, give me not the spirit of sloth, meddling, lust for power and idle talk.
But grant unto me, Thy servant, a spirit of chastity (integrity), humility, patience and love.
Yea, O Lord and King, grant me to see mine own faults and not to judge my brother. For blessed art Thou unto the ages of ages. Amen

– Saint Ephrem the Syrian