Maybe it will--I'll let us all know tomorrow, once I know what I actually preached. I usually go into sermons with an idea of what I will say, but I don't write it all out. If the Holy Spirit wants to say something, there's room. It's partly that, but it's partly that I'm lazy and often crunched for time.
A lot of us approach Ash Wednesday as a kind of wake up call, a reminder that we all die in the end, and so we better get on with what we plan to do with our lives. Because we live in a secular culture that wants us to forget this reality, in many ways the Ash Wednesday message that we're returning to death is an important one.
But the pandemic has driven that point home in a way that the symbolism and sermons of Ash Wednesday services never quite managed to do. Almost everyone I know, from all walks of life, is making different life decisions than they would have made three years ago.
The eruption of war in Europe has shifted our attention to the ash part of Ash Wednesday. We may be thinking of the futility of all that we do, when it will all end in ash and decay. With nuclear saber rattling happening and mass bombings in Ukraine, do we need to emphasize the "Remember that you are dust" message of Ash Wednesday?
Our church will have a prayer table with candles to light as we pray for Ukraine, and to me, that's a potent Ash Wednesday symbol too. We are asked to remember that we are dust, but we are not told that our descent to ashes gives us license to forget the tribulations of the world. Many of us are old enough to have seen that iron curtains can come down, that freedom fighters can emerge from prisons and go on to win national elections.
Ash Wednesday begins the season of Lent in dust and ashes, but we are heading towards a very different season, the season of Easter. This season of ash will end at the high holiday, Easter, that tells us that death, decay, and ash will not have the final word.
1 comment:
Thank you for this, Kristin. We're thinking along the same lines, and that's a comfort.
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