The Preacher’s Study
Ash Wednesday
John
W.B. Hill
Joel 2.1-2, 12-17 or Isaiah 58.1-12;
Psalm 103.8-18;
Psalm 51.1-17;
2 Cor. 5.20b – 6.10;
Matt. 6.1-6, 16-21.
It is worth keeping Lent’s special
agenda in mind as we prepare to preach.
Lent originated as a season of testing for those preparing for baptism —
testing whether they had the will to do the will of God — and candidates for
baptism would be enrolled for this testing on the first Sunday of Lent. The Gospel readings during Lent reveal how
Jesus’ own commitment to do the will of his Father was tested by people’s resistance to him (including resistance
from his own disciples!)
But Lent also became a season of
testing for those who had compromised their allegiance to Christ but were now
seeking reconciliation with the company of disciples. They too would be tested for their will to do
the will of God; and they would be enrolled for this testing on Ash
Wednesday. The sign that marked their
path to reconciliation was the sign of the cross which they had received in
baptism, the sign which they now acknowledged had turned to ashes.
Today, however, Lent is a time for
all Christians to follow this path to a new reconciliation, for we are all
heirs of a profoundly compromised form of discipleship, our life’s habits
scarcely distinguishable from those of the surrounding culture. The reading from the prophet Joel addresses
precisely this condition.
The Gospel reading from the Sermon
on the Mount (together with the reading from the book of Isaiah, if that is
chosen) addresses our sorry condition on another level: Jesus warns us that our religion itself can be a way of
avoiding the will of God (and the prophet provides some examples of this
phenomenon).
What does it mean, then, to
observe a holy Lent? Is cultivating some
healthy self-discipline by fasting, or becoming more pious, or joining a study
group an acceptable substitute for “loosing the bonds of injustice, undoing the
thongs of the yoke, and letting the oppressed go free?” Or for “sharing our bread with the hungry,
bringing the homeless poor into our house, and clothing the naked” (Isaiah 58)?
Thus the passionate entreaty in
the reading from St Paul: “Be reconciled to God! For our sake God made him to be sin who knew
no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” Our reconciliation with God consists in
learning to follow the way of Jesus.
So what will our lives be like
when we are reconciled to the Lord, who “is full of compassion and mercy, slow
to anger and of great kindness” (Psalm
103)? Will our experience of
discipleship begin to resemble the experience Paul describes (2 Corinthians 6)?
John
W. B. Hill is an Anglican presbyter living in Toronto, Canada. He is a Council
member of APLM, chair of Liturgy Canada, and author of one of the first
Anglican sources for catechumenal practice.
If this is what God can make of dust and ashes ... WOW!
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