Articles For Children
Observing Lent in Your Family

by Janet R. Knight

Ash Wednesday, February 25, marks the beginning of the six-week observance of Lent in the church. Lent culminates in the events of Holy Week, leading up to the great exultation of Easter Sunday. Because the mood of Lent itself is somber and introspective -- some would even say gloomy -- we often don't think to include young children in its observance, short of the almost obligatory food bank.

But Lent doesn't have to be gloomy. Solemn, yes; but not gloomy. And children can do solemn! Perhaps we should ask ourselves why the opportunity to become more Christ-like is often presented as such a gloomy prospect.

True, denial, abstinence, and sacrifice have long been Lenten emphases but not simply for the sake of going without. Rather, these practices are to help us to focus on Christ, to help us to draw closer to Christ, to immerse ourselves in Christian living, to become more Christ-like.

Families with preschool and elementary-age children can observe the Lenten season as a time when we focus on growing closer to Jesus. For very young children, one of the best ways to talk about Jesus is Jesus as the Good Shepherd (John 10:3-5, 14-16; Luke 15:4-6). For school-age children, families can focus on the Gospel readings in the weekly lectionary. This year, they are: Mark 9:1-5 (March 9); Mark 8:31-38 or 9:2-9 (March 16); John 2:13-22 (March 23); John 3:14-21 (March 30); John 12:20-33 (April 6); Mark 11:1-11 (April 13).

Let children either draw the story on regular paper and tie their drawings on a Lenten tree (a bare branch set in a tall vase or a can filled with rocks or marbles) or draw the story using felt markers on heavy, transparent plastic (obtainable at an office supply store) and mount the drawings on windows for a stained-glass effect. Some cycles of the lectionary don't lend themselves as well to this activity (there are three cycles), and this year's is one of those. You could read one of Jesus' parables each week and let children illustrate it. Other Home Observances of Lent

Other ideas for observing Lent at home:

Create a Lenten worship center (or change your existing worship center). Use a purple cloth for penitence. Include a Bible opened to the Gospel lesson, an empty bowl to symbolize fasting, a sharing box for money for the poor, perhaps a cactus to symbolize a desert journey, and a cross of small branches tied together with twine.

Practice simplicity. An emphasis on simplicity is customary during Lent both to reflect gospel values and to be in solidarity/sharing with those on the margins. Although children won't necessarily understand these reasons, just growing up in a home where simplicity is practiced is in itself spiritual formation. Here are some ways to practice simplicity:

Janet R. Knight is recently retired from editing Pockets magazine.