Second Sunday in Lent

The observation of the penitential season of Lent continues with Second Sunday in Lent. For this occasion Archbishop Cranmer adapted the Collect from a prayer in the Gregorian Sacramentary, one of the three primary sources in the Roman Catholic tradition. It is the first of five Gregorian Collects used in the season of Lent. This is not surprising, given the important part Pope Gregory the Great played in the Western Church’s celebration of Lent. One of the themes (“evil thoughts”) in the Collect is repeated in, or perhaps sourced from, the Epistle reading from the pen of St. Paul.

ALMIGHTY God, who sees that we have no power of ourselves to help ourselves;
Keep us both outwardly in our bodies, and inwardly in our souls;
that we may be defended from all adversities which may happen to the body,
and from all evil thoughts which may assault and hurt the soul;
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle reading, 1 Thessalonians 4:1-8, another teaching from St. Paul on the Christian virtues. St. Paul focuses on self-control, especially in matters of “passions,” particularly “concupiscence,” or “passion of lust” in the New King James Version. In the early Church, especially in the Eastern Church, these desires are commonly referred to as “ill dreams and dark pleasures.” That specific term is used in the Third Prayer for the Vespers office in Hear Us, O Lord: Daily Prayers for the Laity and a related phrase, “ill dreams and nightly fears, wrought by dark and evil spirits,” in the Sixth Prayer in the Compline office. A similar topic is discussed in the VIRTUE(S) entry in Layman’s Lexicon: a Handbook of Scriptural, Liturgical & Theological Terms, and a text box, “The Christian Virtues and Their Opposites,” is found on page 165, in The Gospel of Matthew: Annotated & Illustrated, all three books are available through my Amazon Author Central page, with complete details of each book on the AIC Bookstore page.

Christ and the Canaanite Woman, illumination in tempera and gold on parchment, Codex Egberti, circa 980-983, Codex 24, Folio 25v, Wissenschaftliche Bibliothek der Stadt Trier, Trier, Germany. Public Domain.
Jesus with the Woman of Canaan, oil on canvas, Michael Angelo Immenraet, Unionskirche, 1673, Wikimedia Commons.

The Gospel reading, Matthew 15:21-28, is the third in a row in Lent and one for four readings in Lent from the Gospel of Matthew. The evangelist records an encounter between Jesus Christ and the “Woman of Canaan,” who had a demon-possessed daughter. The woman is called a “Syro-Phoenician” in Mark 7:26. The image from the Codex Egberti appears as Illustration No. 78 in The Gospel of Matthew: Annotated & Illustrated, and, in a larger, high-resolution version, as Illustration No. 41 in The Gospel of Mark: Annotated & Illustrated, both available through my Amazon Author Central page. Full information about both books is found on the AIC Bookstore page. The difference between the two names is the result of the different target audience for each Gospel. St. Matthew’s Gospel was intended for unconverted Jews, who would know the region by its Hebrew name, Canaan. Mark’s target audience was broader and more likely included people who would know the region by its geographical name. Although the unnamed woman was not a Hebrew, in verse 22, she calls Jesus by the titles of “Lord” and “Son of David.” The conversation is wide-ranging and includes reference to Jesus’ mission and “little dogs” and “crumbs under the table.” Jesus speaks to her with the admonition, “I was not sent except to the lost sheep of Israel” (verse 24 in the New King James Version). The woman’s daughter is healed owing to what Jesus describes as the woman’s “faith”: “O Woman, great is your faith! Let it be as you desire it.” (verse 28, NKJV).

The Collect and the two readings are discussed in Episode Two in our video series, Lent: a Penitential Season. My Podcast Homily for Second Sunday in Lent is linked from the Podcast Homilies page. One of the great hymns associated with Second Sunday in Lent, Kind Maker of the World,” is attributed to Gregory the Great. In our Bookstore Publication, The St. Chrysostom Hymnal, it remains Hymn 56 but the words are set to the more easily-sung French tune from the Grenoble tradition in the mid-18th C., Deus tuorum militum. Some hymnals label the tune “Grenoble,” and others credit it to the Ambrosian tradition in northern Italy. The tune’s name literally means “God of your soldiers.” The volume, as noted above, like all the AIC Bookstore Publications, is available through my Amazon Author Central page.

As always, thank you for your interest and support for this site. Glory be to God for all things! Amen!