Remember that you are dust, and to dust you will return.
Ashes to ashes.
Dust to dust. This is the harsh
reality of sin. The use of ashes long
pre-dates the New Testament Church. In
the era of the Patriarchs, Job confessed his sin and declared, “I despise
myself and repent in dust and ashes.” (Job 42:6) The Imposition of Ashes teaches a dual
lesson.
1) It is a mark of penitence. We demonstrate outwardly the sorrow for sin that we have inwardly.
2) It is a mark of death. It is a reminder that we are all dust, and to dust we will return. The ashes remind us that we are helpless in our sinful condition. Our only hope is a Savior. We repent of our works. We cling to Jesus for his.
No one should feel obligated to receive the ashes on the forehead. If you do not want to do it, the ushers will simply pass you by and go to the next row. Children may participate at the discretion of their parents.
We will begin the service with the rite. Where the bulletin indicates, the ushers will
begin to invite people by row to come to the communion railing to receive the
ashes. The penitent will stand at the railing this year to limit touch points, and wait as the pastor applies the ashes to the
forehead in the shape of a cross. Please
resist all temptations to scratch or smear the ashes. (The ashes will easily be washed off with
soapy water.)
This ceremony truly sets the tone for Lenten season. We are marked as sinners. We are marked for death. We are marked as the penitent whose only hope
is Jesus Christ.
Our comfort comes from Jesus who takes our sin. He dies our death. He marks us as his own who have been baptized
into his name. That is where the
penitent find comfort. That is where the
dying find life.
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