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Welcome
New Here?
About Us
What We Believe
Our Leadership
Worship
Worship with Us
LiveStream & Video
Music
Devotions & Prayer
Be Involved
Outreach
Christian Education
For Youths & Children
For Adults
In Our Community
Responding to Racism
Responding to Gun Violence
Pastoring the City
Daily Office
News & Member Info
News
Upcoming Events
Church Calendar
Give Online
Memorials
There’s something about Ash Wednesday
February 16, 2020
Uncategorized
Dear friends,
There’s something about Ash Wednesday.
Every year it happens:
people who don’t come to church regularly—or, sometimes, ever—show up on that first day of Lent to be marked with ashes.
Sometimes they come to the Ash Wednesday service; sometimes they show up at a different time of day altogether to seek that ashy cross.
I’ve brushed aside thick hair and wispy bangs to make room on foreheads for those two crossed lines that form our central Christian symbol; I’ve marked smooth hairless heads of infants and wrinkled bald heads of old men.
It is holy, every time.
It is somber and humbling and holy.
Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.
Yes.
Ash Wednesday—and indeed all of Lent—is about remembering our frailty
and
our worth, our sinfulness
and
God’s love for us.
In the prayer book liturgy for Ash Wednesday, the priest says,
I invite you … in the name of the Church, to the observance of a holy Lent, by self-examination and repentance; by prayer, fasting, and self-denial; and by reading and meditating on God’s holy Word.
As your priest, I invite
you
to the observance of a holy Lent.
And I invite you to begin that observance at one of our three Ash Wednesday services so that you can receive again the grainy gray reminder of God’s love for fragile, fallible you.
Blessings,
Anne