From the Provost’s Desk Friday, February 27, 2026

Email from Saint Mark's Episcopal Cathedral

From the Provost's Desk

February 27, 2026

 

 

Dear Cathedral Community,

 

How Is It with Your Soul? Lent invites us to slow down. To examine-To return!

 

It places before us the ancient and searching question: How is it with your soul? Not how is your schedule, not how is your productivity, not how is your reputation.

 

But how is your soul?

 

Charles Wesley’s hymn presses the question further:

“How is it with your soul?

 

When Jesus makes His home…

 

à And makes your heart His throne?” Lent is the season when we gently ask: Is Christ truly at home in us? Does He reign in our hearts? In our Cathedral community? In the quiet spaces no one else sees?

 

Is He your Lord and King? Does He within you reign?

 

These are not accusatory questions. They are invitational. Lent is not about spiritual performance; it is about honest reflection. It is about allowing God’s mercy to search us and restore us.

 

The hymn continues: “Is there no way of sin , In which you walk unknown?”

 

Lent gives us courage to name what we would rather hide — impatience, resentment, pride, fear, exhaustion, doubt. Not to condemn ourselves, but to bring those places into the light of Christ’s love.

 

Because the goal of Lent is not guilt. The goal of Lent is deeper love.

 

And yet, if we are honest, love can feel complicated in a broken world.

 

There was a season in my own life when that brokenness felt overwhelming. In the years following 9/11, serving as a first responder, I walked through trauma that reshaped my inner world. At the time, I did not fully understand what I was carrying. PTSD was present but unaddressed. The world felt unsafe. God sometimes felt distant.

 

I wrestled with questions that many of us have quietly held:

 

How could Christ be King in a world so fractured?

 

How could God be sovereign amid such suffering?

 

In that season, the question “How much do I love Jesus?” felt heavy. I wondered if my faith was strong enough. If my devotion was deep enough. If my grip on God was secure enough.

 

But Lent eventually led me to a deeper truth. The foundation of faith is not how tightly we hold onto Jesus.

 

It is how faithfully Jesus holds onto us. The gospel does not begin with our love for Christ. It begins with Christ’s love for us.

 

Do you with joy confess - The Lord who died for you? We confess Him not because our love is perfect, but because His love is constant.

 

Lent reminds us:

 

Before we repent — He loves us.

 

Before we return — He loves us.

 

Before we understand — He loves us.

 

Even in our doubt — He loves us. “O may we all rejoice In Him who died for all…”

 

Cathedral community, as we walk this Lenten path together, may we examine our souls honestly. May we ask the hard questions gently. May we surrender what needs surrendering.

 

But above all, may we rest in this unshakable truth:

 

It is not ultimately about how much we love Jesus.

 

It is about how much Jesus loves us.

 

And that love , crucified and risen , is what makes Him King.

 

That love is what heals wounded souls. That love is what restores broken communities. That love is what carries us through Lent and into Easter hope.

 

So let us return.

 

Let us trust.

 

Let us be honest.

 

Let us be held.

 

How is it with your soul? May our answer this Lent be rooted in grace.



In Peace,

 

Tim+

 

The Rev. Timothy M. Kingsley 

Provost, Saint Mark's Episcopal Cathedral

 

 

 

 

 

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Saint Mark's Episcopal Cathedral | 519 Oak Grove Street | Minneapolis, MN 55403 US

 

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