Tuesday, February 20, 2007

"... And to dust you will return"

Ash Wednesday

Readings: Joel 2:12-18; 2 Corinthians 5:20-6:2; Matthew 6:1-6, 16-18.

‘Come back to me with all your heart, fasting, weeping, mourning’ (Joel. 2:12). Who is this God who invites us to return to him? We might instinctively question the sort of relationship which seems to be presented to us. Are we asked to abase ourselves so that this parent will ‘graciously’ receive us back into His love? Where do these tears come from if they’re not the means by which we can earn the renewed toleration of the one whose anger we fear?

But what joy or freedom can there be in that kind of relationship? Why would God, who lovingly crafted us from the dust that is imposed on us today, want us to be anything other than what He made us to be: fully realised beings content in relationship with Himself. That guide desires us to be fully ourselves, at ease in the paths we were born to follow. Tears follow from the violence we do to our own person by becoming divided from our truest being. To return to God is not simply to supplicate to another but also to be reunited to ourselves.

The imposition of ashes that occurs in the Church’s liturgy today is a jarring note of reality. The ending of our mortal lives will be a final separation from the other selves that we choose or have forced upon us. The paradox here is that we are at our most free coming before God as beings acknowledging our own mortality. To know that we will return to dust is, for Christians, to reflect that we were made from dust singularly, as a result of God’s love which surpasses all we can know. Being aware of that love is to know ourselves as deeply valued for whom we really are. It is the journey of believers to find our truest self, the self which God made. It is a pilgrimage that, even with many years behind us, we have still only just begun.

4 comments:

  1. I've had trouble posting so ignore this if you received my previous comment.

    Thank you for the post. It is ironic that I should find this site today of all days. Instead of giving up something for lent, I've decided to read something spiritual each day - so your site is a great resource.

    Have you thought about creating links for your readings for those who do not have a Bible or one at hand?

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  2. There is a link to the text of the readings each day - just click on the word 'readings', appearing in red on the blog, before the references to each day's readings. (Today for example you find it just before 'Joel 2:12-18'.) This takes you to the daily readings, in the New American Bible Version, as given on the website of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops

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  3. I, too am using your website for my daily spiritual reading during Lent, as I did during Advent. I really appreciate what you are doing.

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  4. Thank you. I was clicking on the readings and ignored the highlighted "Readings". So it goes.

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