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Reflections on Purim Through a Lenten Lens

March 14, 2026 by Rev. Dr. Kelly Jackson Brooks. LPCC Uncategorized 0 comments

Lent is a season of stripping away—of illusion, certainty, and self-protection. It is a time when Christians sit honestly with vulnerability, mortality, and the long road toward the cross. And yet, in the midst of this solemn season, this week our Jewish neighbors celebrate Purim—a festival marked by costumes, laughter, noisemakers, and joy.

At first glance, Purim and Lent seem worlds apart.

Purim, which is celebrated this year on March 2nd, is rooted in the Book of Book of Esther, and tells the story of survival in exile. The Jewish people face annihilation under a royal decree, and deliverance comes through the courage of Esther, who risks her life to speak truth to power. The remarkable feature of Esther’s story is that God’s name is never mentioned. There are no burning bushes. No parted seas. No voice from heaven. And similar to times and seasons in our lives, in this country, and on the world stage, God seems hidden.

Lent, too, is a season when God can feel hidden.

We walk through wilderness texts. We sit with temptation, betrayal, and suffering. We pray prayers that sometimes feel like they disappear into silence. The cross looms ahead. Like Esther in the Persian court, we often find ourselves navigating systems of power and uncertainty without dramatic divine intervention – Where are you God?

Through a Lenten lens, Purim offers profound spiritual wisdom.

First, this season grounds us and reminds us that hiddenness does not mean absence. Just because God is not named does not mean God is not present. In Esther’s story, providence works through timing, courage, relationships, and human agency. Deliverance unfolds not through spectacle, but through brave choices made in complicated circumstances – Do we hear this day what scripture is telling us?

Today, we are reminded through scripture and this Holist of Seasons, that there is courage shown constrained spaces. Esther does not choose her position; she finds herself there – “For such a time as this,” as her cousin Mordecai tells her. Lent invites us to consider the same possibility: that our particular moment—however uncomfortable—may be holy ground for faithful action. We may not control the systems we inhabit, but we can choose how we respond within them.

And let us not forget that Purim ends in joy! What was meant for destruction becomes celebration and yes, in the darkest of times we are allowed joy. Sorrow turns to feasting. Lent, too, moves toward reversal. The cross gives way to resurrection. Grief does not get the last word.

Through a Lenten lens, Purim becomes a quiet companion in the wilderness—a reminder that even when God feels hidden, courage matters, faithfulness counts, and unseen grace is at work. What is scripture telling us this day, in this time, in this moment?

In seasons of uncertainty, we are not abandoned.

We are invited.

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