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Ash Wednesday and Lent

Ash Wednesday begins the 40 days of Lent. It is traditionally a time of fasting and penance in Christian churches. It is a time to reflect on our lives and our relationship with God.

Catholics fast by not eating meat on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, and as such the school canteen and café will not have meat available on this day. Students at the College will have the opportunity to receive ashes at an Ash Wednesday prayer service in Week 3 on Wednesday 14 February. The following article from Australian Catholics provides further insight on these significant dates in the Catholic Church.

Robert Dempsey, Director of Mission

From the Ashes

Article written by Fr Andrew Hamilton SJ, 18 February 2022.

Ashes are a powerful symbol of humility and loss but they do not hold the last word as we journey to the glory of Easter.The symbolism of Ash Wednesday is strong and stark. In the Catholic Church it marks the beginning of Lent when churches traditionally change their appearance.

Vestments and altar cloths change from white or green to a sober purple. Statues are covered in purple and flowers disappear from the altar. Taken together with practices such as fasting and other acts of self-denial, they define Lent as a time of austerity. It fits naturally with austere and straitened times and moods in public life – with war, for example, bushfires, covid, political fecklessness and recession.

Ashes themselves are a powerful symbol. They are the remains of destruction by fire. They remind us of the loss of wealth, power, status or health that comes with age, defeat or social change. The bonfire of the vanities collapses into the ashes of loss. In Catholic life the symbolism of ashes is made even more stark by association with the fires of hell and purgatory, with the history of the burning of heretics, martyrs and churches, and the bombing of Coventry, Dresden and Hiroshima. Ashes remind us of the insecurity of lives, the transient glories of power, wealth and intelligence, the human capacity for savagery beneath a veneer of civilisation, the death and dissolution that come to all human beings, and the seriousness of the call to conversion. These are the themes of Lent.

Ashes are also a symbol of humiliation. In our culture civilisation and elegance are often seen to begin with sweeping dust and ashes from houses and with removing them from our skin and clothing. A substantial part of our economy is based in producing cleanliness. As a result, we identify burned or scorch-marked clothing and a dirty skin as a sign with poverty, a lack of due self-care, or with human decline. To be dirty humiliates us. The word ‘humility’ comes from the Latin word for soil. It points to the bare, forked reality that we share with animals. In Christian term it also reminds us of the weakness, betrayals and neglect that mark our lives, no matter how elaborately we create a self-image to conceal them. The humiliation of Lent is to recognise what and who we are, and to know that God loves and cares for us as we are. To leave ashes on our foreheads after Mass is a strong and challenging symbol.

Ashes are also a symbol of the seasonal regeneration that follows burning. After bushfires tree trunks remain black and leave marks on us if we brush against them. Green shoots, however, gradually emerge from ashes and sprout from blackened tree branches. In the forest death yields to life. That, of course, is also the whole point of Lent. Its ashes do not have the last word. Life continues, regenerates, and spreads from the ashes. In the Christian story the ash of bare and sinful humanity reflects the love that leads God to share the ashes of our life, the humiliation of dying naked on a cross, and to rise green from the ashes.

The ashes of Lent look forward to the green and spreading vine of Easter by which in Christ we are received into the happiness of the kingdom of God.