When anyone is baptized in the Presbyterian Church someone affirms their faith and makes a promise. In the case of an adult, the person being baptized makes their own profession of faith and promises. When it's an infant, the parents make the vows in the hopes that when the child grows up they will make their own profession. We don't ask for a series of 20 promises and theological affirmations, but only a few: Do you profess your faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior? Do you renounce evil and affirm reliance on God's grace? Do you intend to actively participate in the worship and mission of the church? These few affirmations, however, are the foundation and bedrock of our spiritual growth and faith journey.
Tomorrow we begin the season of Lent. This season of repentance and preparation is an opportunity for us to reflect on how we are living out the vows and affirmations we made when we were baptized or when we made our own professions of faith. How are our lives being molded by our faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior? What difference does this affirmation make in the way we are living our life today? How are our lives being shaped by our reliance on God's grace? Are we faithfully living out our promise to actively participate in the worship and mission of the church? What difference does our baptism and our professions of faith make in the way we live, in how we spend our money, in what we do with our time, in how we relate to others? Are we intentionally living our lives in ways that are consistent with these promises? As a time of preparation, the season of Lent is an invitation to consider anew these important vows and how they shape who we are and what we do.
We invite you not only to prayerfully reflect on your baptismal vows in the season of Lent, but to begin Lent with us at West on Wednesday, February 6 at 7:00 PM when we gather for an Ash Wednesday Service of Worship. Please join us for a quiet, reflective and prayerful time. The service will include the imposition of ashes for those who desire to receive them as a sign of our repentance.