Ash Wednesday—Applied Every Day

Ash Wednesday seems like an odd tradition to those who don’t observe it.

Think about it. The ashes of burned crosses from the previous year’s Palm Sunday are saved. Then, a clergyman or layman rubs the cinders on the foreheads of “the faithful” in the shape of a cross.

(Speaking of ashes, the holiday also represents “National No Smoking Day” in Ireland.)

Ash Wednesday . . . Every Day Ash Wednesday—Applied Every Day

(Photo: By Oxh973, Jennifer Balaska. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)

So what’s the point of wearing ashes on Ash Wednesday? The cinder residue is reminiscent of the biblical act of repenting “in dust and ashes” (Job 42:6).

Many Christians have no connection with Ash Wednesday’s tradition.

But we all have need of what it represents.

Dirty Foreheads, Unclean Hearts

Ash Wednesday represents the need to repent. Whether or not you have a dirty forehead, you do have a heart that needs cleaning.

So do I.

But what does repentance look like beyond the ashes?

All four Gospels indicate John the Baptist specifically fulfilled Isaiah’s prophecy of a voice crying in the wilderness—a voice that prepared the way for the Messiah (Isaiah 40:3).

Wadi Qilt and Judean wilderness with Cypros tb051708049 Ash Wednesday—Applied Every Day

(Photo: Judean wilderness, courtesy of the Pictorial Library of Bible Lands)

The wilderness of Judea today sits virtually unchanged since the time of John. Deep valleys, high hills, and rough, rocky paths set apart this barren wasteland where John preached the words, “Make ready the way of the Lord, make His paths straight” (Luke 3:4).

  • In ancient times, when a king would visit a foreign land, he would send workers ahead to smooth a road so that the he could come unhindered.
  • In preparing the pathway for the King of kings, John pointed to the rough land around him and compared it to the hard hearts he saw.
  • John used the physical geography in his message to communicate the need for spiritual change:

Every ravine will be filled, and every mountain and hill will be brought low; the crooked will become straight, and the rough roads smooth (Luke 3:5).

The simple command that characterized John’s message, “repent,” literally means a change of mind that should produce a change of action.

Ashes, Ashes, We All Fall Down . . . on our Faces

What geographic illustration would John use to describe our hearts today?

  • Do we seem like rocky crags or soft pathways?
  • Do we demonstrate a barren wilderness or a peaceful pool?
  • What in our lives would Christ have to walk around if He came to us right now?

Back to the ashes. We always have to return to this simple truth:

Jesus refused to commend any religious activity that was not an expression of character. (Tweet that.)

This is why the Bible remains so adamant about the renewal of the mind (Psalm 119:9-11, Proverbs 23:7; Romans 12:1-3; Colossians 3:1-10). That’s where repentance begins.

I think it’s ironic that the ashes are applied to the forehead on Ash Wednesday.

Because only with a renewed mind every day comes a new life.

Question: Do you participate in Ash Wednesday—or know someone who does? What do the ashes represent? You can leave a comment by clicking here.

Adapted from Wayne Stiles, Going Places with God: A Devotional Journey Through the Lands of the Bible (Ventura, CA: Regal, 2006), p. 92. Used by permission.

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