http://www.tothesource.org/2_22_2012/2_22_2012.htm
Re-posted and Condensed from To the Source
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| February 22, 2012 |
by Dr. Benjamin Wiker
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The first truth. You live in a culture that celebrates perpetual youth, a culture that feverishly tries to wring immortality from mortality. You will hear, when the ashes are smeared, “Remember, O man, that you are dust, and unto dust you shall return.” Death awaits us all. No one escapes, no matter what miracles of modern medicine temporarily grant reprieve. All must face death because death will face us.
The second truth. The reminder that we are made of dust takes us back to Genesis, and the truth accepted by faith that we are made from dust, and that it is only by the breath of God that this dust has life. …
The third truth, again from Genesis. Death was not meant to be. Returning to dust, was the punishment for sin. You may, then, hear an alternate line as the ashes are smeared on your forehead. “Turn away from sin and be faithful to the Gospel.” And that is the third truth: there is sin, and we each are sinners. … Ashes are smeared on you; ashes are smeared on me; and we are each told, “YOU turn away from sin, and YOU be faithful to the Gospel.” …
The fourth truth. Repentance is not cheaply bought for it was dearly won. … Ash Wednesday is only the beginning of Lent, the first day of fasting, prayer, and almsgiving that stretches for the entire forty days that Christ was in the desert. These are all quite revolutionary acts, especially in our culture, which is very nearly defined by the celebration of the seven deadly sins.
- Fast from lust.
- Fast from gluttony.
- Fast from avarice.
- Fast from sloth.
- Fast from wrath.
- Fast from envy.
- Fast from pride.
The fifth truth. When you submit to having ashes smeared on your forehead, you are saying to all who see them: “I am a Christian first. …” If we blend in with the culture, and it is a culture of death, then we embrace ashes but no hope. If we willingly receive these ashes, then we are marked out for a hope that is not of this world and a culture of life defined by it. These ashes mark you out as a revolutionary. Pray for the courage to live like one.
The sixth truth. When you receive these ashes, and wear them so visibly into the public square, you are boldly reminding the state that from the beginning of recorded time we see nations come and go but the church remains. … “You too shall return to the dust. Let this ashen cross remind you that, while nations rise and fall, the church has remained these two thousand years, and we are in every nation of the world, in them but not of them. And when you are gone to dust, as with all the other nations, the church will still be here.”
The seventh truth. The dark ashen cross is the portal to Easter. There is light at the end of the forty-day tunnel, and at the end of the tunnel we are commanded to put away all Lenten fasting and feast, to rejoice and celebrate, not in debauchery but in holiness and gratitude. But even here, we must always remember: there is no resurrection without the crucifixion; there is no Easter without Lent. And so next year we will here again, “Remember, O man, that you are dust, and unto dust you shall return.” And we shall have Ash Wednesdays until we finally do return to dust, and then, so we hope and pray, enter into the eternal Easter.
Written by Sherry Lord
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