Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of
the season of Lent. Lent is a time when many Christians prepare for
Easter by observing a period of fasting, repentance, moderation and
spiritual discipline.
Ash Wednesday emphasizes two themes: our sinfulness before God and
our human mortality. The service focuses on both themes, helping us to
realize that both have been triumphed through the death and resurrection
of Jesus Christ.
During some Ash Wednesday services, the minister will lightly rub the
sign of the cross with ashes onto the foreheads of worshipers. The use
of ashes as a sign of mortality and repentance has a long history in
Jewish and Christian worship. Historically, ashes signified purification
and sorrow for sins.
It is traditional to save the palm branches from the previous Palm
Sunday service to burn to produce ashes for this service. Sometimes a
small card or piece of paper is distributed on which each person writes a
sin or hurtful or unjust characteristic. The cards are then brought to
the altar to be burned with the palm branches. The ash cross on the
forehead is an outward sign of our sorrow and repentance for sins.
— Adapted from The United Methodist Book of Worship
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