Wear These Ashes Well | Ash Wednesday

a white person has dark ashes in the shape of a cross on their forehead

Readings here

It’s that time of year again…the time for news websites all over the Internet to share think pieces about Ash Wednesday.

In an article for The Living Church, the Reverend Matthew Olver, a lecturer at Nashotah House, argues AGAINST putting ashes in the form of the cross on the forehead. He says that, in the earliest form of the English prayer book, published in 1549, the imposition of ashes was taken out of the Ash Wednesday service. Instead of ashes, the reformers added prayers and psalms that served as a form of “public confession.”

Ashes were not re-instituted in American practice until the 1979 revision to our Book of Common Prayer. In England, they didn’t start up again until 1986. That wasn’t that long ago, but for many of us in the church today, we never had an Ash Wednesday without ashes.

And Reverend Olver does not suggest that we remove ashes altogether. Instead, he suggests that we should sprinkle dry ashes over the head instead of marking our foreheads with them. That way, he says, we could participate in the symbolic act of recognizing our mortality without drawing attention to ourselves for the rest of the day.

His suggestion is a creative one – most people would just unceremoniously get rid of the ashes. But it stems from the same discomfort that many of us feel on this day…

It is more than a little weird that we mark our foreheads with a dramatic black cross on the very day that we read these words from Jesus:

“Beware of practicing your piety before others in order to be seen by them…and… do not look dismal, like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces so as to show others that they are fasting.”

Can we honestly say that we are avoiding that kind of pious vanity project when we go around town with ashes on our faces all day?

Well, lucky for us, Reverend Olver isn’t the only person writing think pieces.

In an article for the New York Times, former atheist Christoper Beha makes an argument FOR the imposition of ashes. Beha, who is Catholic, points out that ashes are one of the few truly public rituals of the church, open to anyone, anywhere. While you’ll probably have to chat with a priest or take a class before getting baptized or taking communion, you can literally get ashes-to-go outside of a Starbucks these days.

Beha says that receiving the ashes was his entryway back into the church. After years spent as a skeptic and atheist, it gave shape to his yearning – to be held and guided by a God – and a faith – that was more than words could express. It helped him accept his own imperfection, and admit that he couldn’t fix himself on his own. And it allowed him to walk humbly toward God even as he continued to ask questions.

For Beha, the fact that the ashes are visible enhances the prayers and psalms we recite today. This “outward and visible sign” is what makes our confession public beyond the church walls. In this way, ashes are not about being showy, or telling everyone that you’re a good person. They are a way to humble yourself, by serving as a reminder that no matter where you go or what you do, you are called to be Christ-like.

As a person who spends much of my life walking around in a clergy collar, I have to say that, in the “think piece” wars, I side with Christopher Beha. While there is always the temptation for a visible symbol of our professed faith to make us feel entitled, I have to say that the second that I walk into an H-E-B with a collar on, the thing I feel isn’t pride – it’s more like discomfort.

Confused stares, averted eyes, existential questions in the checkout line; without fail, the cashier asking me if I’m a nun. It’s enough to overwhelm even the most extroverted extrovert. And all the while I know that, simply by the way I am dressed, I am representing the church in the world – for good or for ill.

Ashes do the same work.

Maybe there was a time in history when sporting a big black cross on your forehead would get you more respect. We are not living in that time now. Whether we leave them on all day or wash them off after the service is over, ashes make visible the invisible commitments of our faith, a faith that has increasingly fallen out of fashion.

First and foremost, they make these commitments visible to the us, the ones who wear the ashes. Because if someone is going to watch us be Christians, we’re going to have to act like Christians, all the time. We are compelled to ask ourselves if our professed beliefs are reflected in our lives: Do I show respect to my colleagues? Do I cuss too much in Austin traffic? Do I really care for my neighbors? Am I too impatient with my family?

If we wear these ashes well, we are at no risk of being called hypocrites by Jesus. What will happen is that we will have to reckon with the hypocrisy of all those days we live without ashes on our foreheads – when we can hide who we are meant to be in Christ, and ignore his calls to grace, mercy, and love.

Throughout this Lenten season, I pray that we will develop practices that align with these ashes on our foreheads. That we will have the courage to admit we can’t fix ourselves on our own. That we will return to God, and that in our returning, we will be able to re-enter our daily lives beaming – not with our own pompous pride – but with the marvelous light of God.

Amen.

That We May Embrace Hope

Readings here

Blessed Lord, who caused all holy Scriptures to be written for our learning: Grant us so to hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them, that we may embrace and ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life, which you have given us in our Savior Jesus Christ; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Every year on this Sunday, we encounter again my very favorite collect, written by my very favorite Archbishop of Canterbury: Thomas Cranmer. In truth, I don’t pay very much attention to the Archbishops of the Church of England, even though I am excited that the new one is the first woman to hold the position.

But, Cranmer will always have a special place in my heart. Not only was he the first Archbishop of the Church of England, he also compiled, composed, and edited the very first Book of Common Prayer, the book that contains the foundational liturgies, prayers, and theology of the Anglican and Episcopal Church.

The heart of Episcopal Christian identity is informed by this book, and it connects us back, not only to the moment of rupture and renewal that took place during the Reformation in the 1500s, when much of Europe declared itself Protestant. It also connects us back to the church that existed before that moment, in the processions of the medieval cathedrals, the Eucharistic Prayers of the early church, and even the sacrifices of the Roman temples and Jewish synagogues.

In this way, the Book of Common Prayer, while specific to the Anglican and Episcopal Church, actually reminds of us that we are members of the universal church, founded by Christ, and revealed to us in the Scriptures.

In a way, Cranmer’s collect on the scriptures is a kind of thesis statement for the whole tradition. Because, it points us all the way back, past tradition, to the record of our faith, belief, and practice: the Bible. It reminds us that everything we do and believe as disciples of Christ, in this Episcopal Church, is rooted in the stories of God and God’s people as they are revealed in scripture.

And, it gives us some guidance for how to engage with Scripture: “hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them, that we may embrace and ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life…”

A lot of people have used this prayer for Bible Study. I have seen it used almost as a step-by-step guide to reading scripture. But, what sometimes gets lost is the reason why we would want to engage with scripture at all. After all, we’ve already got this big, expansive tradition with all of its liturgies and practices. What are we supposed to get out of reading the Bible, that we can’t get through praying and going to church?

The collect actually answers that question for us: “that we may embrace and ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life, which you have given us in our Savior Jesus Christ.” The point of Scripture is to give us a reason to embrace hope.

And we couldn’t have a better example of that, than in our passage from Isaiah 65…

For I am about to create new heavens
and a new earth;
the former things shall not be remembered
or come to mind.
But be glad and rejoice forever
in what I am creating;
for I am about to create Jerusalem as a joy, and its people as a delight.

Someone asked me this week how we can read hopeful passages like this one when the state of the world feels so hopeless? Doesn’t it give us indigestion to read something so sweet when the world around us is so bitter? When we are surrounded by fear and suffering, and our existential questions aren’t getting answered.

Borne of years of my own encounters with suffering, and my own encounters with Scripture, my response was immediate and unwavering.

I said, “Because, when you read a passage like this one, where God himself is painting a picture of paradise – in which there is no suffering, but only joy – when you read something as grand as that, you are reminded that your vision of beauty is the exact same as God’s. That God wants the same things you do. That there is, in fact, no division between the desires of your heart and God’s own heart. And suffering isn’t part of God’s design.

In this passage, God reverses the curses of Genesis: unburdening labor, disappearing pain, and rewinding all the years of layered sorrows, in a vision so bright it almost feels reckless.

A scripture passage like this one shows us that it is ok to imagine the best possible future, even in the midst of the worst possible reality. It is ok, because the people of God have traveled difficult terrain before, and they were still able to hold onto hope. It is ok, because God’s desire is to make it reality. This is a passage that hypes us up – if we let it, it can give us a reason to embrace hope.

But, what do we do with more troubling passages, like the ones from Second Thessalonians and Luke?

“Anyone unwilling to work should not eat.”

“…they will arrest you and persecute you…”

Well, if Cranmer is right that engaging with Scripture helps us “embrace hope,” then we are obligated to look for the light, even in difficult texts. This isn’t the same as manipulating scripture to suit our needs. We’re not ignoring the confusing or concerning parts of the Bible by reading hope into them. We are simply aware that a “God-breathed” scripture must include some evidence of God, who is “love.”

And when we really spend time with scripture, we discover that God’s promises are seeping into our imperfect and troubling reality…

In Second Thessalonians, a complaint about idleness is directed at a specific community that has abandoned a shared vision of the Christian community. Convinced that their own salvation means that they’re free to just “chill out” ‘til Jesus comes, the writer reminds them that there is still much work to be done to build the Kingdom of God – and that it will take everyone’s efforts. This is ultimately a democratizing vision, against the priestly hierarchies they are accustomed to. Because here, everyone matters.

In Luke, Jesus names the scary reality on the ground, where followers of Christ are targets of both state and religious violence, and where increasing tensions threaten widespread warfare. Then, he tells his people that he will be with them, guide them, and protect them unconditionally – and for all eternity.

So, we see that even troubling scriptures will crack open with hope, if we dare to tap into them.

The Bible will never gloss over the human condition. It is gritty and troubling, and sometimes prompts more questions than answers. And isn’t that just like life? Gritty, troubling, and often more confusing than clarifying.

But, the scriptures are also a record of hope already realized. And because of that, we can have hope and faith that God is present with us now.

In the midst of this mucky and murky human condition is a God lighting up the shadows, calling us out of exile, drawing us out of our self-involvement, healing broken things, troubling the powerful, and creating new heavens and a new earth to spite disaster, sin, and grief.

God grant us so to hear them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest the Scriptures. God grant us so to hope, trusting that God is never idle, but always at work, reversing the curses of our fallen humanity.

Amen.