Information you can use in your church bulletins or newsletter regarding Lent Madness (and once again this year I am using this very creative way to study the saints more fully as my spiritual discipline for Lent.)
Lent
Madness 2015
Which saint will win the Golden Halo?
Which saint will win the Golden Halo?
For the sixth year running, people worldwide are gearing up for
Lent Madness, the “saintly smackdown” in which thirty-two saints do battle to
win the coveted Golden Halo. Calling itself the world’s most popular online
Lenten devotion, Lent Madness brings together cut-throat competition, the lives
of the saints, humor, and the chance to see how God works in the lives of women
and men across all walks of life.
The creator of Lent Madness, the Rev. Tim Schenck, says, “People
might think Lent is all about eating dirt and giving up chocolate, but it’s
really about getting closer to Jesus.” Schenck, who is rector of St. John’s
Church in Hingham, Massachusetts, adds, “The saints aren’t just remote images
in stained glass windows or pious-looking statues. They were real people God
just happened to use in marvelous ways.”
Lent Madness began on Schenck’s blog in 2010 as he sought a way to
combine his love of sports with his passion for the lives of
saints. Starting in 2012, he partnered with Forward Movement (the same folks
that publish Forward Day
by Day), to bring Lent Madness to the masses.
The Rev. Canon Scott Gunn, Schenck’s Lent Madness co-conspirator,
says, “Throughout Lent, as we’re having fun with the competition, we are also
inspired by how God used ordinary people to do extraordinary things.” Gunn, who
is executive director of Forward Movement in Cincinnati, Ohio, adds, “That’s
the whole point of the Christian life: to allow God to work in us to share
God’s love and proclaim Good News.”
Schenck and Gunn form the self-appointed Supreme Executive
Committee, a more-or-less benevolent dictatorship that runs the entire
operation. The formula has worked as this online devotional has been featured
in media outlets all over the country including NBC, The Washington Post,
FOXNews, NPR, USAToday,
and even Sports
Illustrated (no, really).
Here’s how it works: on the weekdays of Lent, information is
posted at http://www.lentmadness.org
about two different saints. Each pairing remains open for 24 hours as
participants read about and then vote to determine which saint moves on to the
next round. Sixteen saints make it to the Round of the Saintly Sixteen; eight
advance to the Round of the Elate Eight; four make it to the Faithful Four; two
to the Championship; and the winner is awarded the Golden Halo.
The first round consists of basic biographical information about
each of the 32 saints. Things get a bit more interesting in the subsequent
rounds as we offer quotes and quirks, explore legends, and even move into the
area of saintly kitsch.
This year Lent Madness features an intriguing slate of saints ancient and modern, Biblical and ecclesiastical. 2015 heavyweights include Teresa of Avila, Frederick Douglass, Francis of Assisi, Hildegard of Bingen, Balthazar, and the Venerable Bede. The full bracket is online at the Lent Madness website.
This year Lent Madness features an intriguing slate of saints ancient and modern, Biblical and ecclesiastical. 2015 heavyweights include Teresa of Avila, Frederick Douglass, Francis of Assisi, Hildegard of Bingen, Balthazar, and the Venerable Bede. The full bracket is online at the Lent Madness website.
From the “you can’t know the saints without a scorecard”
department, the Saintly Scorecard -- The Definitive Guide to Lent Madness 2015
is available through Forward Movement. It contains biographies of all 32 saints
to assist those who like to fill out their brackets in advance, in addition to
a full-color pull-out bracket.
This all kicks off on “Ash Thursday,” February 19. To participate,
visit the Lent Madness website, where you can also print out a bracket for free
to see how you fare or “compete” against friends and family members. Like that
other March tournament, there will be drama and intrigue, upsets and
thrashings, last-minute victories and Cinderellas.
Ten “celebrity bloggers” from across the country have been tapped
to write for the project including the Rev. Amber Belldene of San Francisco,
CA; the Rev. Laurie Brock of Lexington, KY; Dr. David Creech of Morehead, MN;
the Rev. Megan Castellan of Kansas City, MO; the Rev. Laura Darling of Oakland,
CA; Neva Rae Fox of Somerville, NJ; the Rev. Nancy Frausto of Los Angeles, CA;
the Rev. David Hendrickson of Denver, CO; the Rev. Maria Kane of Houston, TX;
and the Rev. David Sibley of Manhasset, NY. Information about each of the
celebrity bloggers and the rest of the team is available on the Lent Madness
website.
If you’re looking for a Lenten discipline that is fun,
educational, occasionally goofy, and always joyful, consider this your
invitation to join in the Lent Madness journey.
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