2023 LENTEN PASTORAL LETTER FROM THE GHANA CATHOLIC
BISHOPS’ CONFERENCE (GCBC)

Theme:
Lent: A Grace-Filled Time to Seek Peace and Reconciliation with God and Neighbour


1.0 Greetings
1.1 Dear brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus, as we prepare to start this year’s Lenten
Season, we, your Bishops, bring you fraternal greetings of peace and blessing. We wish to
invite you, our dear brother Priests, Consecrated Men and Women, and Lay Faithful, and
indeed, all Christians and men and women of good will resident in our country, Ghana, to
join us during this special season of grace to work towards peace and reconciliation with
God and neighbour.


2.0 Lenten Season: A Grace-Filled Time of God’s Mercy and Favour
2.1 On Ash Wednesday, which falls tomorrow, we will join Catholics and other Christians
all over the world to begin the Season of Lent, a 40-day pilgrimage of faith to God. When
we gather in God’s presence at the beginning of Lent on that day, we will do so to express
our need of God’s mercy and forgiveness by participating in a corporate act of penance and
reconciliation, beseeching God for the grace to use this favourable time to prepare for the
celebration of Easter.
2.2 Traditionally, we mark the Lenten Season with religious acts of prayer, fasting and
almsgiving. We also undertake other Lenten pious exercises such as weekly Stations of the
Cross, daily praying of the Holy Rosary, pilgrimages to various Marian Shrines and Prayer
Sanctuaries for recollections and retreats. We believe that by undertaking these spiritual
acts of penance with sincere hearts and contrite spirits, the Lord our God who sees all that
is done in secret will look with serene countenance on us and grant us His mercies and
unmerited favour (cf. Matt. 6: 3-4, 6, 17). In the light of this belief, we wish to call on all
citizens of Ghana in general, and our Catholic faithful in particular, to intensify their life
of prayer, fasting, and good works and also avail themselves for the sacrament of penance
and reconciliation in this season of Lent.

3.0 Lenten Season: A Special Season of Instruction
3.1 St. Jerome says that: “Ignorance of Scriptures is ignorance of Christ”. This means that
a Christian who does not read the Scriptures and live according to its teachings does not
know Christ, for no Christian can worship God faithfully without a deep reverence and
love of God’s Word.
3.2 When we read and or listen to God’s Word attentively and meditatively, we see and
experience God in our midst and we meet God in His fullness as He speaks to us. In God’s
Word, we come to know and understand God’s plan and purposes for our lives, we come
to sense His ways and His love and to acknowledge His holiness. In reading the Word of
God, we find guidance and direction as well as peace, joy, fulfilment, and hope (2 Tim.
3:16-17).
3.3 Since Lenten Season is a special season of instruction, the readings for the season have
been chosen carefully to help our faith to grow. Consequently, we wish to exhort all our
Catholic faithful to endeavour to spend more quality time in this grace-filled season to
reading their Bibles, other spiritual books and to listen attentively to the instructions on the
faith in the various celebrations of the Season.


4.0 Lenten Season: Resisting Evil and Sinful Inclinations
4.1 Lenten spirituality is combative, a struggle against evil and sinful inclinations. In this
season, we need to carry out the combat against evil and sinful inclinations every day.
Some of these challenges we need to nip in the bud, among others include: bribery,
corruption, greed, armed robbery, destruction of the environment, murders, violence and
intimidation. Using the weapons of prayer, fasting and almsgiving, we must face the
struggle to overcome these evil and sinful inclinations in our lives each day, particularly,
in this holy Season so as to dwell in the mercy of God.
4.2 This grace-filled season invites us not only to be content with ridding ourselves of grave
or mortal sins, but also every venial sin. In this spiritual endeavour, we exhort all to strive
to be committed to prayer, fasting and almsgiving as well as the practice of corporal and
spiritual works of mercy proposed by the Church, such as feeding the hungry, clothing the
naked, sheltering the homeless, visiting the sick and the imprisoned, bearing wrongs
patiently, comforting the sorrowful and admonishing sinners during this season of grace.
5.0 Prayer for End to Conflicts, the Beginning of Reconciliation and Peace


5.1 The ongoing conflicts in Bawku and other parts of the country as well as the raging
Russia-Ukraine war continue to fill our hearts with much sorrow and grief.

As we continue to pray for God’s definitive intervention in these conflict situations, we
call on all Catholics and other Christians as well as our Muslim brothers and sisters and
indeed all people of faith and good will to join us to continue to offer prayers and petitions
to God within this special Season and beyond for an end to these conflicts and wars. We
must intensify our prayers for an end to these wars and conflict situations in the hope that
with God all things are possible. Prayer is our greatest weapon; for what is impossible,
prayer makes possible.
5.2 In the same light, we urge prayers for all the victims of the Turkey-Syria disaster, for
God’s repose for those who have lost their lives, especially, our compatriot Christian Atsu.
We pray for consolation for the grieving families and God’s abundant blessings for those
involved in the rescue efforts.


6.0 Conclusion
6.1 In conclusion, we believe, as Christians, that Jesus Christ is our peace and
reconciliation and that He has broken down the walls of discrimination and division among
people, and more so, He has reconciled humanity with God our Creator and us with each
other (cf. Eph. 2:14-16; 2 Cor. 5:19-21).
6.2 Our country, at this material moment, needs her sons and daughters to live in peace and
harmony in their families, in their marriages and homes, in their localities, in their places
of work, in their clans and ethnic groups, peace and harmony among members of different
political parties and in the nation as a whole. We believe that it is time to change our hearts
and seek peace and reconciliation with God, neighbour and the world around us. Our prayer
is that we will all endeavour to use this year’s Season of Lent to seek peace and
reconciliation with God and our neighbours.
6.3 May God bless our homeland Ghana and make our nation great and strong. May God
grant us His peace and a grace-filled Lenten Season!


MOST REV. MATTHEW KWASI GYAMFI
CATHOLIC BISHOP OF SUNYANI & PRESIDENT,
GHANA CATHOLIC BISHOPS’ CONFERENCE
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2023

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