Evangelical Reflections - Ash Wednesday - February 17, 2021

February 17, 2021 - Ash Wednesday
Ash Wednesday is going to feel very different for all Catholics, but especially American Catholics this year.
Last year on Ash Wednesday, if someone had mentioned a “global pandemic”, we all would have looked at that person like they were nuts. “Social distance” means what??
We are entering our first full Lent of this pandemic and it will look different for everyone. Most notably on Ash Wednesday, we will not be receiving ashes in the shape of a cross on our forehead like most of us have experienced our whole lives. Instead, ashes will be sprinkled on the top of our heads. That means that most people will not even know that they are there except for us, those who receive them.
It’s strange, but in a way, it’s also fitting when we look at today’s Gospel. Jesus is literally telling us to not let others know when we do good deeds, when we are praying, when we are fasting. If anything, we should probably look more happy and cheerful when we are sacrificing versus when we are not. And now, we will not have a visible sign of ashes to let anyone know we are fasting and praying.
I’m sure many of us will miss the ash crosses on our foreheads, especially as it has become a social media phenomenon the past few years: take a selfie with your ashes and #ashtag it. I know my friends and family and I liked to compare our crosses- whose could you barely see and who Father felt extra generous with that year.
Jesus promises us that our “Father who sees in secret will repay” us. Let’s take this opportunity at the beginning of Lent to seek true humility. Allow the ashes that no one can see but that we know are there to be the starting point of a Lent focused on our secret prayers and our hidden good deeds, that we may seek the approval of our Heavenly Father and not the approval of this world.