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“FIRST IMPRESSIONS”
ASH WEDNESDAY
March 5, 2025
Joel 2: 12-18
2; Corinthians 5:
20-6:2; Matthew 6: 1-6, 16-18
By Jude Siciliano, OP |
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Dear Preachers:
What are you doing for Lent? We get asked that
question a lot as we begin the penitential season. What about writing
encouraging notes to death row inmates? I post three names and their addresses
each week. See below.
While
these reflections usually focus on the Sunday readings, I also realize that many
of us will be preaching today because of the special Ash Wednesday services
(myself included!). So, I thought I would share a few reflections on the day.
Some of these thoughts may also help us reflect on the entire season of Lent and
so may provide background for other preachings during the Lenten season we are
entering.
Ash Wednesday. The very title has an ominous ring to it. Add to that the somber
reminder as ashes are imposed on our foreheads, “Remember you are dust and to
dust you shall return.” The alternative formula, “Turn away from your sin and be
faithful to the gospel” sounds much better. I want to “be faithful to the
gospel”. But I am too quick to skip that opening, “Turn away from your sin.”
Sounds like, “Repent!” to me. There it is again, that serious note. No matter
how you put it, I am dust and I must repent. No getting around the serious shift
in sights and sounds the liturgy just took. Ash Wednesday is preceded by Fat
Tuesday’s excesses because we all know how grim Lent can be. Let’s enjoy
ourselves one last time before we enter the long dark tunnel of Lenten denial.
So goes the popular notion of Lent. But suppose it isn’t such a glum note?
Suppose there is something joyous and relieving about Lent? Suppose, in other
words, it is a time to clear away the distractions and hear again the liberating
message of the Gospel? And suppose it is also a time to renew our community’s
commitment to spread that message to others by our words and deeds? Still more,
suppose it is a call to live as the reconciled community we claim to be,
wouldn’t that be a powerful message and an invitation to others to be part of
us?
We really don’t need Ash Wednesday to remind us that we are dust. Reminders of
dust are all around us. Dust is what we return to at the end of our lives. But
long before we breathe our last, life reminds us of the corruptibility of
everything. So much of what we put our confidence in ages, breaks, comes apart
at the seams and wears out. All that is new, shiny and glitzy have a very short
life expectancy. Mortality touches even our most noble human treasures; loved
ones die, sickness limits us, age saps our energies and our noble efforts to do
good feel the strain of the long haul. This day’s liturgical action puts ashes
on our foreheads, dust before our eyes, but the ashes are just a reminder of
what life does to us all too frequently. It comes over to us and, in one way or
another, rubs ashes on our foreheads, and says, “Remember, you are dust.” It is
frightening to thing about how much we forget and run away from this reality. So
much of our society bases our identity and worth on what we have achieved and
what we own. Today says, “Remember, it is dust.”
But after we are told to repent we are invited again to “be faithful to the
gospel.” We are invited today to remember that we are baptized Christians,
called to be in the world in a unique way. The world we live in is guided by
different standards and norms for behavior. These ashes also remind us that our
old way of life is dead-- turned to dust. We don’t belong to the old world any
longer so we need to stop living as if we do. We are reborn to a new life. And
our lives in Christian community must reflect this new life and help others to
hear the message we hear today, “Remember all else is dust” In Paul’s language,
our lives are an invitation to others to, “...be reconciled to God,” for we too
are “ambassadors for Christ.”
Walter Brueggeman, referring to the dust statement in Gen 2: 7
(“The Lord God formed the human person of the dust of the ground and breathed
into his nostrils the breath of life and man became a living creature.” ), says
that the Ash Wednesday liturgical formula reminds us that the human person is
fundamentally material in origin, subject to all the realities of an “earth
creature”. And since dust is no “self starter,” the reality of the human
situation is that we depend on God’s free gift of breath. We are humans totally
dependent on God for each moment of our existence. This is not a curse, but what
it means to be human. So, when we are told to remember we are dust today, we are
also making a statement about ourselves to God. It is as if we are saying,
“Remember our origins O God. We are dust without you. So much of what we touch
turns to dust if not done in your name. Sustain us moment to moment in your life
and through the death of your Son, deliver us from our sin.” Who are we humans?
We are creatures gifted from moment to moment by our gracious God and that is
not a bad thing to remember as we enter another Lent.
It is important during Lent not to privatize the season. Over the generations,
with the separation of adult baptism from the Vigil, we lost a sense of the
communal sense of Lent. What we got instead was a highly individualized
experience focusing on private spirituality with personal penances and
“spiritual development.” As always the scriptural readings give us balance and
keep us on track. While we won’t be focusing on Joel, notice, in passing, the
call for the assembly to gather, “notify the congregation, assemble the
elders....” The community is being gathered and reminded to turn back to God,
“...rend your hearts not your garments and return to the Lord your God.”
The selection from 2 Corinthians puts our Lenten focus on the community’s
renewal in mission. Paul’s letter reveals that the Corinthian community showed
the same flaws as our own church communities. (The first thing we said in
today’s Eucharistic gathering was “Lord have mercy. Christ have mercy. Lord have
mercy.”) We do tend to idealize the early church community, don’t we? It’s as if
they were the perfect model of what it means to be a Christian community and we
are always falling short of their mark. But they were, and we are, always in
need of reconciliation. In fact, Paul speaks very boldly appealing on God’s
behalf for this reconciliation. Jesus is the sign that God wants to be
reconciled to us. There is an urgency to this appeal for reconciliation. “Now is
the acceptable time.” Things must have been pretty hot among the Corinthian
Christians! We may be resistant to God and to changing our ways (“Turn away from
sin and be faithful to the Gospel.”), but God is once again taking the
initiative to appeal to us to return.
Throughout the first 7 chapters of this letter Paul is focusing on the gospel
message of reconciliation and on the nature of Christian ministry. This
community was split into bickering factions. Paul can be quite harsh in his
criticism of them. Christ’ death has reconciled us to God and so, not to live as
a reconciled community is to deny that gospel and to fail to be, with Paul, an
“ambassador for Christ” to the world. Lent calls us back to God and to each
other in community. The message we are to proclaim is a message to be preached
by the witness of the whole community as we live out our joyful awareness of
what God has done for us.
Click here for a link to this Sunday’s readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/030525.cfm
QUOTABLE
“Capital punishment is against the better judgment of modern criminology and
above all, against the expression of love in the nature of God”
----Rev. Martin Luther King
POSTCARDS TO
DEATH ROW INMATES
“One
has to strongly affirm that condemnation to the death penalty is an inhuman
measure that humiliates personal dignity, in whatever form it is carried out."
---Pope
Francis
Inmates
on death row are the most forgotten people in the prison system. Each week I am
posting in this space several inmates’ names and locations. I invite you to
write a postcard to one or more of them to let them know that: we have not
forgotten them; are praying for them and their families; or, whatever personal
encouragement you might like to give them. If the inmate responds, you might
consider becoming pen pals.
Please write to:
-
Scott Allen #0005091 (On death row since 11/18/2003)
-
Terracne Elliott #0120236 (12/18/2003)
-
Jason W. Hurst #0509565 (3/17/2004)
----Central
Prison P.O. 247 Phoenix, MD 21131
Please
note: Central Prison is in Raleigh, NC., but for security
purposes, mail to inmates is processed through a clearing house at the above
address in Maryland.
For
more information on the Catholic position on the death penalty go to the
Catholic Mobilizing Network:
http://catholicsmobilizing.org/resources/cacp/
On this
page you can sign “The National Catholic Pledge to End the Death Penalty.” Also,
check the interfaith page for People of Faith Against the Death Penalty:
http://www.pfadp.org/
DONATIONS
“First Impressions” is a service to preachers and those wishing to
prepare for Sunday worship. It is sponsored by the Dominican Friars. If you
would like “First Impressions” sent weekly to a friend, send a note
to fr. John Boll, OP at
jboll@opsouth.org.
If you
would like to support this ministry, please send tax deductible contributions to
fr. Jude Siciliano, O.P.
St. Albert Priory, 3150 Vince Hagan
Drive, Irving, Texas 75062-4736
Make checks payable to: Dominican Friars.
Or, go to our webpage to make an online donation:
https://www.PreacherExchange.com/donations.htm
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FIRST IMPRESSIONS Archive
(The latest are always listed first.)
• Lent-5th Sunday (A) • • Lent-4th Sunday (A) • • Lent-3rd Sunday (A) • • Lent-3rd Sunday (C) • • Lent-2nd Sunday • • Lent-1st Sunday • • Ash Wednesday • • 8th SUNDAY •
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