My VIP for this week is God. February 18 marked the beginning of Lent, so Catholics across the world went to Mass to “receive burned ashes on their forehead in the sign of the cross.” Lent is “the holiest season of the year” and leads “to the commemoration of Jesus’ betrayal, suffering, death, and resurrection during Holy Week.
For
those people, like me, who are not Catholic, an article by Tom Griffin, chair
of the religion department at a Catholic high school on Long Island, can
increase our understanding of our friends, the Catholics.
Griffin
quoted Martin Luther King Jr. as saying, “If a man has not discovered something
that he will die for, he isn’t fit to live.” Then he asked what or who we would
make the ultimate sacrifice for or “resides at the center of our lives” Catholics
receive ashes on their forehead to show that they are a witness, and there are
three parts to this witness.
First,
it reminds us that we came from nothing and that we will deteriorate into
ashes. Life is fragile and life is short. Therefore, Lent serves as a launchpad
for Catholics to consider what they are really living for? …
Second,
the ashes act as our first opportunity to consider how I am being called to
sacrifice more for God and others in my life. The ashes on our heads were
produced through the bringing of palm branches. These branches were used in the
celebration of Palm Sunday the previous year. This is the commemoration of
Jesus’ triumphal entrance into Jerusalem the week of his death.
The
ashes on our heads are cause to consider our death, but also cause to consider
the suffering, beating, and humiliation that Jesus endured for love of you and
me.
In
light of his sacrifice, what can I sacrifice to grow closer to him? The word
sacrifice literally means to give up something good for something greater….
Finally,
the ashes force us to think about our own brokenness and sinfulness.
The
concept of Catholic guilt is a common understanding in our culture. The truth
of Catholic guilt is that we are all sinners.
Christianity
only makes sense if we admit that we are sinners in need of a savior….
The
call of Lent is to be more honest with ourselves about our need for God. Yes,
because we are sinners but also because we are not meant to go through life
alone. Our God became one of us so that we would know that He is always with us
drawing us closer to Himself. Even more so, we are invited to not only spend
more time with God in prayer this Lent but to allow our time with Him to
transform us to become like Him.
The
Lenten season can become a transformation when we realize that God is worth
everything. That He is worth dying for, yes, but even more – He is worth living
for. That is why, above everything else, the ashes truly matter.
Not
being Catholic, I did not receive ashes on my forehead today. However, I like
the idea of the Lenten season as a time to recognize that I have been given
much and that I have much to give to other people. It is also a time that I can
prepare more fully to commemorate the suffering, death, and resurrection of the
Savior, even Jesus Christ.
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