Ash Wednesday

Sin and Death Dealt with on Earth, Joel 2, Matthew 6

The sin and death that is within us is something that must be dealt with on Earth. It is the problem of Earth and not that of Heaven. Thus, Jesus comes to deal with it here on Earth that we might be saved from sin and death by his death and resurrection. On Ash Wednesday, we embrace that reality and enter the season of Lent recognizing that we can’t deal with death without Jesus.

Image: The story of the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons. Location: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:King_Hezekiah,_clouthed_in_sackcloth,_spreads_open_the_letter_before_the_Lord.jpg

The Small Way of Obedience, Matthew 6, 2 Corinthians 5:20-6:10

As we come to Ash Wednesday, we must consider just what we are doing on this day. C.S. Lewis said, “Good and evil both increase at compound interest.” Everything that we do will shape and remake us. Father Jeremiah considers this truth as he reflects on the ashen crosses upon our foreheads.

image: Celebration of Ash Wednesday and Eucharist in the Roman Catholic Church, by Bernard Picart. Public Domain. Image location: https://www.lookandlearn.com/history-images/YR0308725/Celebration-of-Ash-Wednesday-and-Eucharist-in-the-Roman-Catholic-Church

Hope through an Ashen Cross, Joel 2, Matthew 6

On Ash Wednesday, we gather to get an ashen cross marked upon our foreheads. What is the purpose of this? How does it relate to our faith? What does it tell us about ourselves and the work of Christ? Father Jeremiah helps us to understand that this ashen cross directs us to the cross of Christ and the death of our old self that we might live in new life.

www.gracegastonia.com/sermon-blog/2022/3/2/hope-through-an-ashen-cross-joel-2-matthew-6

Tension and Grace, Ash Wednesday

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On Ash Wednesday we hear from Scripture about sinful fasting and repentance that isn’t really fasting and repentance because it is done for the publicity and show of it. And yet, we are fasting and repenting publicly ourselves. What do we do with this tension that we find before us in Scripture and ourselves? Father Jeremiah considers this in his Ash Wednesday sermon.

Image: by Jerome Quinto, SDB. Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0. No changes made. Image location: https://www.flickr.com/photos/techunk_7/16566392255/in/album-72157648552783614/