I have always resonated with the season of Lent and
in particular, Ash Wednesday which starts this season of the Church Year. The season of Lent is sometimes understood to
be penitential, and some traditions understand Lent to be a time of giving
things up in order to draw closer to Christ through what I call “small scale
suffering.” Lent is also understood to be a time of contemplation, and
historically, has been a time of preparation for baptism. For me, and my
tradition, Lutheran Christians, it is a time of drawing closer to God in
preparation for bearing witness to Christ’s death on a cross and what that act
means for us. The crucifixion is the
vanquishing of the finality of death, but also represents the passage from
death into life. You cannot skip the suffering.
Personally, I resonate with Ash Wednesday because we
are given the opportunity to name, without qualification, that we are
mortal. That at the end of this life
lies death. That no matter how we try or what we do, life ends the same for all
of us. That when we are marked with
ashes on our forehead and our preacher proclaims, “Remember that you are dust,
and to dust, you shall return.”
It’s the one day in the church year where Christians
slow down enough to notice the ever forward movement towards death that begins
at our birth. Where so many other people get to witness what I witness every
single day in the chaplain trade…that death is inescapable.
It’s hard to see this as good news.
That no matter what you do or where you go or how many
life-prolonging procedures you might undergo, you too will die. Just like
everyone else. Exceptionalism is a farce
when it comes to death. There is often a lot of frenetic activity up until the moment a patient or family recognizes that death is inevitable. Then, time seems to open up and expand and be intense and emotional, in a way that happens at no other time. Its a Kairos time instead of a Chronos time. There is freedom when we look death into the face.
Ash Wednesday represents freedom to me. Freedom from the burden of fighting
mortality. Freedom to say boldly, “I cannot save myself.”
The Gospel text for this day, Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21, seems to
call out all those practices, such as almsgiving, fasting, and so on, that
would make you publicly appear to draw closer to God. Jesus uses the word
“beware” in this text. Because
activities will not bring you rewards or everlasting life or comfort. You cannot orchestrate your own salvation
through the things that you do. The only thing you have to do is the most
difficult there is, which is to surrender.
And Ash Wednesday is a profound surrender. Dwell deep in the fact that you are
mortal…you are dust….and to dust….you shall return.
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