| painting by Anne Cameron Cutri |
Not that I am an amazing, or even adequate, housekeeper, but I do sometimes think of Lent as a time of cleaning (myself) up before a BIG EVENT. My pattern is to start out with a bang, vacuuming up all those Ash Wednesday ashes, paying close attention to the neglected baseboards and ceiling-corner-cobwebs. As the days and weeks tick by, that first rush of energy and enthusiasm is replaced by The Half-Hearted Slog, where I decide to stop dusting altogether--no one will see the top of that bookcase anyway. The kitchen junk drawer I was so keen to organize, is now crammed with even more junk, from other random places in the house. My Lenten prayer practices shoved in a drawer too, un-practiced.
Holy Week is the final push, where my usual church attendance doubles, even triples. I sincerely hope this year I will emerge from this sacred season with a new closeness to God, a new confidence in my faith, a new resolve to tackle the world’s problems (which, btw, I am more excited to tackle that my own personal ones). This is the point in the metaphor where I do my whirling dervish thing, broom in one hand and glass cleaner in the other, madly prepping for Easter, in my home and heart.
Good Friday is the day when I realize that, though I haven’t done nearly enough, it’s time to stop anyway. I’m as presentable as I’m going to be, and the doorbell is ringing. Death will come calling for me some day, as it does for everyone--even for Jesus. I sat in St. Peter’s Lafayette Hill on Friday night, at a beautiful service anchored by two pastors, and by music presented by Sheridan and Ya-Jhu, and their combined congregations’ choirs. At the conclusion, after one by one the candles had been extinguished, we left in darkened silence. I thought of my own mortality in the light of eternity, and I felt, not dread, but a profound sense of peace.
Then came the liminal day (Holy Saturday) of waiting, followed by the Sunday joy of resurrection, of an empty tomb, of hope fulfilled. Yesterday, Easter Monday, was one final pause before the kids went back to school, before normal daily life resumed.
But what about today? Is there such a thing as Easter Tuesday?
I believe there is. I think today is much like the Tuesday after Labor Day (for us, the first day of the new school year.) Just as every summer has disrupted our routines, and in some way changed us, so we wake up each Easter Tuesday as different people. Not perfect people; we still have our cobwebs and dust in the corners. But we’ve made it through another Lent, and, if we allow it to happen, we can keep at least some of our own “resurrection” going, on into the rest of our lives. We can hold onto some peace. And joy. And hope.
So Happy Easter Tuesday. And Wednesday. And beyond.
Here's an arrangement by Sheridan, performed by Trio Barclay on their new album "Trinity."


