Catholic Spiritual Direction

Lent and mortification – what is mortification anyway?


Q: Dear Father John, what is “mortification” and how does it relate to Lent? What does Saint Paul mean in 1 Corinthians 9 where he says, “I pummel my body and subdue it…” Is he talking about “mortification”?

A: The root word for “mortification” comes from the Latin, mors and mortis, and it translates as “death.” In the spiritual life, therefore, mortification refers to voluntary actions by which we gradually “put to death” all of our vices, sinful habits, and the self-centered tendencies that lurk beneath them. Spiritual writers use terms like abnegation, sacrifice, self-sacrifice, and self-denial to refer to the same thing.

Jesus spoke about mortification as an absolute necessity for growth into Christian maturity. Here are some of the better known passages:

If anyone wants to be a follower of mine, let him renounce himself and take up his cross every day and follow me (Luke 9:23)

In all truth I tell you, unless a wheat grain falls into the earth and dies, it remains only a single grain; but if it dies it yields a rich harvest (John 12:24).

Anyone who wants to save his life will lose it; but anyone who loses his life for my sake, and for the sake of the gospel, will save it (Mark 8:35).

St Paul regularly emphasized this “best practice” of the spiritual life. Besides the passage you mention in your question, here are some other favorites:

…[Y]ou must see yourselves as being dead to sin but alive for God in Christ Jesus (Romans 6:11).

You were to put aside [we could say “put to death] your old self, which belongs to your old way of life and is corrupted by following illusory desires. Your mind was to be renewed in spirit so that you could put on the New Man that has been created on God’s principles, in the uprightness and holiness of the truth (Ephesians 4:22-24).

…[W]e too, then, should throw off everything that weighs us down and the sin that clings so closely, and with perseverance keep running in the race which lies ahead of us (Hebrews 12:1).

It may seem like overkill to list so many quotations (and there are a lot more), but I do so because this is a hard concept for us to accept. A secular culture by definition seeks heaven on earth. According to that mindset, suffering of any kind is valueless and to be avoided – a far cry from the Christian pattern of death to sin (through voluntary self-denial) as a path to true life.

In Pope Benedict’s recent message for Lent, he explains the reason behind this pillar of Christian spirituality: “Freely chosen detachment from the pleasure of food and other material goods helps the disciple of Christ to control the appetites of nature, weakened by original sin, whose negative effects impact the entire human person.”

In other words, because God has chosen to redeem our fallen human nature, and not just replace it, his grace enters into our wounded, self-centered, sin-tending souls, and gradually transforms them (think of Jesus’ parable of the leaven in the dough). But since we are free, spiritual creatures (not just instinct-driven squirrels), we have to freely cooperate with his grace in order for this process to fully develop. One of the ways we do this is through freely denying ourselves certain pleasures that are not in themselves sinful, e.g. not listening to the radio for the first three minutes of a half-hour commute, offering the silence as an act of mortification, and maybe using it to pray. When we do that, we learn to govern our tendencies to pleasure and self-seeking (which are always waiting for opportunities to run wild); we tame them so that they are fruitful and not destructive, like a tamed stallion as opposed to a wild stallion. This self-governance helps creates interior order and peace, so that we can better hear and respond to God’s action in our lives. The mortification is never an end in itself, but a means by which we become better followers of Christ.

Spiritual writers have used many images to explain the value of mortification. Picture a jar full of very sour vinegar. You want to fill it up with sweet honey. First you have to empty out the vinegar, and then scrub the inside of the jar, and only then can you put in the honey. Just so, to receive the many gifts of grace God wants to give us, we have to empty out and scrub clean every corner of our heart and mind, otherwise the grace can’t get in. Think of a garden (as in Jesus’ parable of the sower). The soil is our fallen human nature, riddled and overgrown with poisonous weeds (vices, selfish tendencies, psychological and emotional wounds…). God comes and plants the seed of grace, the seeds of all the Christian virtues. We water those seeds through prayer and the sacraments. But we also need to pull up the weeds (and some of them have very deep roots), otherwise they will choke the growth of grace, and our virtues will end up looking like Charlie Brown’s Christmas tree.

OK, now let’s get practical. What does this have to do with Lent? The Church is a wise mother. She knows that we like to feast more than we like to fast, which is perfectly normal. But she also knows that if we don’t fast (practice mortification), we will get spiritually out of shape pretty quickly. So she has built into the liturgical year certain seasons when we focus a little bit more than usual on this aspect of our spiritual life – penitential days and seasons, like Lent. So, fasting (some form of mortification, voluntary self-denial) is a normal part of every Catholic’s Lenten journey; it gets us in shape for the holiest days of the year – Holy Thursday through Easter Sunday.

Each of us should choose some form of mortification (something that we notice, but not something that distracts us or overburdens us – balance and realism are important for a healthy spiritual life). In this way, we can unite our increased spiritual efforts to those of our Catholic brothers and sisters throughout the world, making this season a real family affair. Together we go with Jesus into the desert, where he spent 40 days practicing mortification, as a preparation for his public mission.

In another post on this blog, we have made some suggestions about what you can “give up for Lent.” Hopefully this current entry has helped you understand more deeply the value of giving up something.

Yours in Christ, Father John Bartunek, LC

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  • We should all wear sackcloth and ashes for the hell our priests are going through. How many priests have been kicked out of their only homes - the rectory - after an accusation against them is telephoned which may or may not be true. How can he prove his innocence 30 or 40 years after the fact? And the priest is not told the name of his accuser. Whatever happened to fair play and the opportunity to face one's accusers? Please pray for our beloved priests who, despite being one phone call away from the end of their careers, still find the strength and love to guide and lead us. What brave souls they are. They deserve our daily prayers this special year and always. May God remain with them.
  • melinwy
    Great question and answer, truly helped me understand.

    God Bless you and thank you.
  • guadalupe
    Ok, I'm a little confused here. I understand we are to walk with Our Lord for the 40 days, but that there are actually only 36 days because we don't fast on Sundays. So an additional 4 days were added? Wed Thurs. Friday Saturday of Ash Wed. Week?
    Are we to fast all week? See I need a little direction here, thanks.
  • Cathy
    I hope it is ok that I responded. I used to think the way you wrote the question. I understand what you were asking.
    Lent does begin on Ash Wednesday, and includes the Wed, Thurs, Fri, and Sat of Ash Wednesday week. Ash Wednesday starts the Lenten season. May God bless you on you Lenten journey.
  • guadalupe
    Thank you so much, it's just fine that you responded. Sorry that my question was so unclear.
    And may you walk hand in hand with Our Lord during this Holy Season.
    Gail



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  • danburke
    Not sure I understand your question.
  • underhermantle
    Lent and mortification. What is "mortification"?
  • Mary7Macharia
    Thank you, Fr. John for this very informative Article. You have shown me the way to follow this very special Lenten Season. God bless you.
  • JoFlemings
    Dan, may I ask what version of the Bible these quotes, on this- as usual- fabulous post(!), are from? Is there one you recommend over the others?
  • danburke
    Jo - Father got back to me - it is the New Jerusalem. I use the Jerusalem for meditation. I like the RSV for study... I know that Father John's favorite translation is Knox...
  • danburke
    Dear Jo in Christ. Fr Bartunek has been traveling. I have not received an answer yet. I know he does enjoy the Ronald Knox translation (difficult to find). Personally, I like the Revised Standard Version for study and the Jerusalem Bible for meditation. Hope that helps.
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