Ash Wednesday 2009
Grace Church, Utica
In today’s world, if you say to
someone that it’s the beginning of Lent and that you’re going to church, you’ve
got a 50/50 chance of getting a blank stare, or at least a look of boredom.
Unlike Christmas, which has become a purely secular holiday for many people, or
Easter, which has become society’s “spring festival,” Lent is something that is
peculiarly Christian. And this is true despite that fact that in large cities
like New York, more people will enter churches today than any other day of the
year. They come to have ashes imposed upon their foreheads, because they know,
almost instinctively, that everything in their lives is not as it ought to be.
On Ash
Wednesday we do indeed receive marks on our foreheads— a cross traced with
ashes, reminiscent of the cross that was traced with sacred oil at our
baptisms. This cross is not intended as a public display of our piety or as
evidence of the fact that we are religious people. Rather, this cross reminds
us who we are and to whom we belong. This cross on our foreheads, like the
crucifix that sits on our altar during Lent is intended to remind us that
Emmanuel— “God with us”— died on a cross
out of love for you and me.
Since
Old Testament times, ashes have been a sign of mourning. As we begin this
lenten season, we are entering a time of mourning—
—
mourning for the death of Christ
—
mourning for what has been lost
in our
own lives and in the world.
The fact that the smudge from
the ashes is black and dirty, reminds us that our hearts and souls are unclean,
and that we stand in need of God’s saving grace.
Yet in
spite of their inherent dirtiness, ashes have also been used in cleaning and
purification. They can be used to make soap and other cleansing and polishing
agents. These ashes placed on our foreheads will remind us that it is God who
washes us from our iniquities and cleanses us from our sins.
The
ashes also remind us of our mortality. Produced from the palms of previous
years, they remind us that we, too, are made of dust and will return to the
earth.
And so
we enter Lent marked with the sign of a cross made from dust on our foreheads,
and we are reminded that we have been sealed by the sign of that very same
cross. We are indeed reminded of who we are and to whom we belong. We have been
sealed as one of God’s own chosen children sealed forever into a relationship
with a gracious God.
In the
Old Testament Lesson the prophet Joel exhorts us to return to the Lord.
Wherever we are in life, whatever problems we are facing, whatever joy we may
be experiencing, whatever sin we may be carrying, whether our faith is strong, weak, or non-existent, the
prophet Joel tells us, “Return to the Lord your God.”
In this
usage, the word return means to repent of wrong doings, to change direction, to
stop doing the things that are hurtful to other people, and things that
alienate us from God. To return is to turn one’s face and focus toward
God. We are encouraged to return to the
Holy One, the one who is gracious, merciful, slow to anger and abounding in
steadfast love.
Lent is
all about returning to God. The central focus of Lent is not really fasting and
sacrifices, although for some people these acts of self-restraint are useful in
helping one return to God. Lent is about really turning our focus from inward
“naval gazing” toward being outwardly God-focused. It is about turning toward
God and away from the things that are wrong, hurtful, or alienating. It is
about is about redirecting our gaze from the treasures on earth and toward the
cross. Lent is about remembering that we have been sealed in a relationship
with One who is gracious and merciful toward us.
Mercifully
for us this seal holds even on the days that we can’t remember to whom we are supposed
to turn, and in which direction where we are supposed to look. Along with the
psalmist we plead
Create
in me a clean heart O God,
Renew a
steadfast spirit within me.
Our attempts to return to God by our own efforts are reminiscent of the fable
of the King with only one son.
This son had traveled a 100 days away from the King and was desolate. His
friends kept urging him to return to his father. He kept saying I cannot. His
father hearing of his plight wrote to him, “Return as far as you can to me and
I will meet you on the journey.”
So it is
with God, who understands our weaknesses and our faith that wobbles, and our
inability to turn toward the Holy One. God sent a Son to meet us
on our life’s journey.
One
theologian has written that our attempts at Lenten sacrifice, fasting and
penance may actually be more effective if we fail in them than if we succeed.
Their purpose is not to save us by our own efforts but to bring home to us our
need for God’s intervention.
Because with our own efforts we
are unable to turn around, repent and be reconciled to God. God sends a Son to
us.
As St. Paul wrote in our reading
from Second Corinthians
“He who knew no sin was made by
God to be sin so that in Jesus we might be made right and reconciled with God.”
And so tonight
As we enter Lent
And accept the ashen cross
On our foreheads,
We acknowledge
That by ourselves,
We cannot stop sinning,
And that by ourselves,
We cannot repent or turn toward
God.
Instead, we reflect on that
ashen cross
And the merciful God
Who used a hated cross
As a way to save us,
And who sent a Son to meet us
And carry us on the path toward
the Holy One.
Amen
Ash
Wednesday 2007
The Hasidic tradition of Judaism teaches
that every one of us should have two pockets in our coat, and that in each
pocket there should be a slip of paper with a note on it. The note in one
pocket reads, “I am only dust and ashes.” In contrast, the note in the other
pocket reads, “For me the whole universe was created.”
Sometimes we need to remember that first
note; we will do it [today] [tonight]
as we come to be marked with the ashes of repentance. There are other
times when we need to remember the second note, to remember that through our
faith in Christ we have been adopted as God’s sons and daughters, have received
forgiveness for our sins and been made joint heirs with Christ of all that is holy
and gracious. We will also do this
[today] [tonight] as we receive the Blessed Sacrament of the
Lord’s Body and Blood.
Sorrow and joy.
Repentance and forgiveness.
Humility and joyful confidence.
Fasting and Feasting.
These are the parameters that define our life in Christ. These are the things the Holy Spirit seeks to arouse within us, both convicting us and comforting us as we live out our Christian commitment.
This is especially true in Lent, when
the Church holds before us our Lord’s sacrifice on the cross as our spiritual
preparation for celebrating his victory on Easter Day. Lent is a time to focus
on one of the great mysteries of our faith expressed in the familiar words,
“Christ has died. Christ is risen. Christ will come again.” It is also
expressed in the words, “I am only dust and ashes”... [and yet,] “for me the
whole universe was created.”
As we embrace both of these truths— as we feel both sorrow over our sins and joy
over our salvation— may it begin a
season of both fasting and feasting: a fast in which we rend our hearts and not
our garments, and a feast in which we give thanks to God for his goodness and
mercy.
In our fasting, may we take to heart the
words of St. John Chrysostom, the fifth century Bishop of Constantinople, who
cautioned:
“Do you fast? Give me proof of it by
your works. If you see a poor man, take pity on him. If you see a friend being
honored, do not envy him.
“Do not let only your mouth fast, but
also the eye and the ear and the feet and the hands and all the members of our
bodies.
“Let the hands
fast, by being free of [greed.] Let the feet fast, by ceasing to run after sin.
Let the eyes fast, by disciplining them not to glare at that which is sinful.
Let the ear fast, by not listening to evil talk and gossip. Let the mouth fast
from foul words and unjust criticism.
“For what good is it if we abstain from
birds and fishes, but bite and devour our brothers [and sisters]?”
But let us also remember the feasting
appropriate for Lent—
to feast on prayer and forgiveness,
to feast on prayer and forgiveness,
to feast on compassion for other people
and on the Christ
who is present to us in them
to feast on praise and gratitude
for the blessings God has given
to feast on enthusiasm and hope
for all that God has promised
to feast on the truth which is ours in
Christ
and for the courage to proclaim it>
May the Lord who came to the world to save the lost, strengthen us to complete our fast with humility, and to keep the feast with joy and thanksgiving<
May the Lord who came to the world to save the lost, strengthen us to complete our fast with humility, and to keep the feast with joy and thanksgiving<
Ash Wednesday 2006
Grace Church, Utica
In the Old
Testament Lesson, from the book of the prophet Joel, we heard these words:
Return to me with all your heart,
with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning; rend your hearts and not your
clothing.
One of the
ways the ancient Hebrews demonstrated sorrow or anger, was by publicly tearing
their clothes. That meant that any national emergency or disaster, as well as
any piece of tragic personal news, could leave your wardrobe in shreds. The
significance of such an act is certainly far less if you have closets stocked
the way most of ours are. In fact if you’ve got a closet full of clothes,
tearing one garment to shreds would have about as much significance as the
giving up of meat on Fridays and then eating lobster instead. The motive is
insincere— it’s tainted. God looks to
the heart; genuine sorrow for our sins must be heartfelt. So the prophet
tells us to “rend our hearts and not our clothing.”
The emphasis
on the heart was important in the Hebrew tradition, because the heart was
understood not only as the center of our affections and emotions; the heart was
believed to be the “hidden place” — the
sanctuary— the place where faith and
understanding and decisive choices are made. The heart was where our conscience
dwells, the “inner tabernacle” where we encounter God. In the 5th
Century St. Jerome declared that while Plato and the Greek philosophers located
the soul in our heads, Jesus taught that the soul is in our hearts.
But if the
heart is the place where God dwells within us, it is also the place where the
power of sin gets its grip on us. That’s why, on Ash Wednesday, we’re asked not
only to “rend” our hearts, but also to “examine” them. Lent is a
time to examine our hearts, to come to grips with the sources of our own sin
and wrongdoing, in order that we can be ready with clean hearts and minds to
celebrate the Lord’s resurrection.
In just a
couple of minutes, I will, in the name of the Church, invite you to observe a
“holy Lent.” How might we do that? Well, we might start by realizing that
merely giving up something doesn’t get us very far, unless we take up or take
on something in its place. “Taking on” can be done in many ways. It might
include a few minutes of reflection at the end of the day as a means of
self-examination. It might mean looking carefully at what we have said and
done, and at our relationships with those closest to us. It might mean making a
commitment to a deeper life of prayer and scripture reading, setting aside some
specific time to spend in communion with the Lord. It might mean reading the
newspaper— not just to be better
informed but to see where there might be opportunities for us to do something
concrete to make the world a better place. Or, it might mean taking to heart
these words of William Temple, a former Archbishop of Canterbury, when he spoke
about “repentance.” Archbishop Temple said.....
The world, as we live in it, is
like a shop window into which some mischievous person has got overnight, and
shifted all the [price-tags] so that the cheap things have the high
[price-tags] on them, and the really precious things are priced low. We let
ourselves be taken in [when we accept them as is and thereby develop a
distorted sense of values.] Repentance means getting those price-tags back in
the right place.
As we face up
to our own shortcomings, as well as some guilt for how they’ve shown themselves
in our lives, there will probably be some anger and defensiveness to address,
and also some pain as the truth begins to break through. Without the pain,
there will be no gain; and it’s the pain that rents our hearts, and that’s how
you and I walk the way of the Cross.
It’s all an
essential part of the process by which our religion becomes less a theory and
more of a love affair. And when all is said and done, that’s what God really
wants from us, our love— our love offered in return for his love, offered
freely and without any conditions. That’s the way of the Cross, which is for
us, the way of Life.
Ash Wednesday 2005
Remember that
you are dust, and to dust you shall return.
We hear those
words every Ash Wednesday. Those words echo God’s admonition to Adam and Eve,
after they had eaten from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil: “By the
sweat of your face you shall eat bread until you return to the ground, for out
of it you were taken; you are dust, and to dust you shall return.” They also
bring to mind those words from the committal prayer in the liturgy for
Christian burial: “...we commend to Almighty God, our brother [or sister].....
and we commit [this] body to the ground; earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust
to dust.” Ashes to ashes, dust to dust— a stark reminder of our origin as well
as our destination, if we were to be left on our own.
So why do we
bother coming here on this day to have ashes smeared on our foreheads? Why do
we come together in the cold of winter to hear these harsh words? We do it
precisely because we have not been left on our own. We do it as a reminder of
who we are, but more importantly as a reminder of who God is, and what God has
done for us in and through Jesus Christ. We gather because while in and of
ourselves we are dust and ashes, by God’s grace we are so much more than that.
God has, in fact, given us a way out of our plight. It is the way of the Cross.
The death and resurrection of Jesus was God's way of placing a sign of infinite
value upon what might otherwise be worth very little. Of course we don’t begin
this new life [today] [tonight]; it began some time ago, when we were baptized.
That’s when we became inheritors of the kingdom of heaven; that’s when our dust
was given the blessed gift of
redemption.
We gather to
hear, once again, that God has chosen to give us the precious gift of new life,
a life that leads not to the dust heap and the ash pit, but to eternity. What
God asks of us is that we remember we are sinners, that we repent and embrace
Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, and that we accept divine mercy. God also asks
that we practice a piety that is not motivated by thoughts of human praise or
reward. Remember Jesus did not say, ‘Beware of practicing piety,’ nor did he
say ‘Beware of practicing your piety before others.’ He said, “Beware of
practicing your piety before others in order to be seen by them.” It all has to
do with our motives. If our purpose is to demonstrate our own virtue, we’re
wasting our time— in fact, we’re being
blasphemous. If, however, our focus is on God and not on ourselves, then our
piety is not only an offering of praise and thanksgiving, but a time of
communion with the host of heaven.
God has made
a commitment to us, and given to us, in the cross of Christ, the sign and seal
of that commitment. [Today]
[Tonight] we come to take up
that sign once again, the same sign given to us when we were baptized. We come
to re-commit ourselves to God, remembering that while we may be dust, we have
also been redeemed by God’s grace, and reborn into a living hope through the
Lord’s resurrection. It’s a hope that is ours to claim because God has acted in
Christ to offer that new life to all who repent and believe the Gospel.
So come now,
to hear, to taste and to see how gracious the Lord is; blessed are those who
trust in him.
ASH WEDNESDAY 2003
Like some other aspects of the
Christian life Lent is something of a paradox, a seeming contradiction. We see
some evidence of it on Ash Wednesday. As ashes are imposed on your forehead you
will hear the words, “Remember that you are dust and to dust you shall
return.” These bodies
of ours that we pamper with hot tubs and wrinkle creams, and discipline with
aerobic exercise so that we can reward ourselves with pizza and Saranac Amber,
these bodies are going to crumble and decay, and there isn’t a thing any
of us can do about it. Remember that you are dust— it’s enough to
make you cry.
And yet, in another part of the
Lenten liturgy we give thanks to God praying, “you bid your faithful people cleanse their
hearts, and prepare with joy for the Paschal feast....” Prepare with
joy— that means feasting and celebration!
So which is it? What’s it going to
be? Are we supposed to join the prophet Joel, weeping and mourning as we
observe a day of darkness and doom? Or, are we to give ear to Jesus, and douse
our faces with Dove or Safeguard, add a little spritz of Chanel or Polo, and
dance around the clock?
Well, as with any good paradox you’ve got to do
some of each; and Lent is no exception. We must prepare ourselves to face both
sorrow and joy, both tears and laughter, because what we’re preparing
for is the paschal mystery— the mystery of Easter. Embracing Easter
involves embracing the paradox dying and rising, of losing life in order to
gain it. It’s all
symbolized for us in the dust of ashes and in the sign of the cross.
The symbol of dust comes to us from
the book of Genesis, and God’s judgement on humanity after the rebellion of
Adam and Eve. God says to them:
By the sweat of your face you shall eat bread
until you return to the ground, for out if it you were taken; you are dust, and
to dust you shall return.
Every human being on the face of the earth is as
common as dust. We’re ordinary— a speck
in the universe. If a handful of people see us as different and gifted, there
are a billion others who’ve never heard of us and could care less. Each
and every day we are in the process of dying. We are creatures of sin— not always sinning but always blowing hot and
cold, more often than not giving in to our selfishness and our
self-centeredness, and wandering far away from the God whom we ought to love
more than life itself.
That all sounds grim— it is grim if we stop there. But the symbol
of dust is incomplete by itself. Our foreheads are dusted with the sign of the
cross, and the cross declares that our dust has been redeemed. The cross
reminds us that God in Christ took that same dust of which we’re made and
breathed new life into it. As the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins put it, ever since
Bethlehem and Calvary our dusty humanity is charged with the grandeur of God.
Our dust is literally electric with God’s own life. And being electrified with God’s own life we
are assured of a place in God’s eternity.
Lent is an annual reminder of what
Christian living is all about; it’s a joyful opportunity to renew our commitment
to dying and rising with Christ. There will always be some tears as we face up
to our shortcomings and let go of those things we thought were so important;
that’s the dying
part. But then comes the rising, the incredible joy of discovering life— life that is
full and complete, life that is rooted in eternity.
There is no Lent without the Cross;
but neither is there Lent without the Resurrection. Remember that you are dust;
and remember, too, that your dust has been redeemed.