Yes, Lent is over., and were are in the middle of the Triduum of the Christian calendar. Yesterday was Maunday Thursday. (Pretty much all services—aside from the Catholic ones—were canceled yesterday due to a snow and ice storm.) I did not go to church yesterday. Today, however, I played two Good Friday commemorations, one Catholic and one Lutheran.
I have to be honest. Lenten and Easter music just don’t excite me. I’ve been a church musician for close to 40 years now (started playing pipe organ when I was 17 years old), and I still dread Ash Wednesday with all its minor keys and dirges. I know Lent is supposed to be a time of preparation and sacrifice, headed toward the loudness and light of Easter morning, but I won’t cry if I never have to play “O Sacred Head Surrounded” or “Jesus Christ is Risen Today” again. (Let me stress: I’m against the crappy hymns and music of Lent and Easter, NOT the seasons themselves.) You would think that, after 21 centuries, churches might have come up with a few good pieces of liturgical Eastertide music.
Now, before I start getting comments from angry churchgoers listing favorite Lent and Easter tunes, I will say that, given the choice between the funereal ditties of Lent and the overwrought anthems of Easter, I will choose the overwrought. I can get into a rousing chorus of “Up From the Grave He Arose” as much as the next Christian, but it’s just so . . . ostentatious is the word I’m looking for, I guess. I prefer subtlety. What can I say? I’m a poet.
Marie Howe gives us a subtle poem today . . .
The Willows
by: Marie Howe
As we are made by what moves us,
willows pull the water up into their farthest reach
which curves again down
divining where their life begins.
So, under travels up, and down and up again,
and the wind makes music of what water was.
A beautiful little poem that packs a lot of joy. It’s a celebration of “what moves us.” Water—the one thing we (trees, plants, birds, insects, human beings) all depend upon. We can go for days without food. Water, on the other hand, is necessary for survival.
Howe’s words more to me about Lent and Easter than “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross” ever has. Because it’s about the force that sustains and uplifts us. Even the wind sings a water hymn in the last line. That’s what this season is about—walking across a desert and finding a cool, fresh running river at the end. Whether you’re a Christian or not, we can all understand the relief of a glass of icy water on a hot summer day.
You see what I’m getting at, I hope. For me, Lent and Easter aren’t about the ashes and bells and incense and chants. This season is about being offered a hose to slurp from after sweating in the fields all day long (metaphorically speaking).
There’s another ice storm blowing in tonight. I’m sure the grocery stores in the area were jammed with people trying to get their last-minute Easter shopping done prior to the freezing rain. Think Black Friday, but everyone is fighting over hams and baskets and Cadbury Creme Eggs. My wife and I did our final shopping last weekend. We’re not planning on going out a whole lot tomorrow. (I may hit the laundromat, but that’s about it.)
Saint Marty wrote a poem during one of his Good Friday services today . . .
Good Friday
by: Martin Achatz
I sit,
listen
to this
familiar
story of betrayal, love, forgiveness, redemption,
think how my mom, with knees calcified by
arthritis,
knelt in
church every
Good Friday,
knobbed
knuckles
folded,
accepted
her pain
like a kiss
from her
dead mother.



