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What’s That Smudge On Your Forehead?

by American Phoenix | February 17, 2010

LentToday, is Ash Wednesday, the dies cinerum, which marks the beginning of Lent in the Catholic Church.

Lent is the forty day period preceeding Easter, the Quadragesima, which is calculated to extend from Easter Sunday back for forty days, not including Sundays. Sundays are not included because they commemorate Christ’s resurrection.  Why forty days? The forty days commemorate the significant “forty” periods in Scripture, including:

It is not an accident that these “forty” periods were times of prayer and repentence Lent is that time for Christians, during which they remember their sinfulness, fast, and do acts of penance as a recognition that God’s forgiveness came at the price of the death of His son Jesus Christ. It is our “forty” period. During this time, we are reminded that sin separates us from God. One doesn’t usually desire to be separate from the person one loves.

How did we come to receive the ashes? Ashes are a sign of mourning and repentence in Scripture, including the following passages:

The history of Ash Wednesday is a bit obscure:

Despite all these references in Scripture, the use of ashes in the Church left only a few records in the first millennium of Church history. Thomas Talley, an expert on the history of the liturgical year, says that the first clearly datable liturgy for Ash Wednesday that provides for sprinkling ashes is in the Romano-Germanic pontifical of 960. Before that time, ashes had been used as a sign of admission to the Order of Penitents. As early as the sixth century, the Spanish Mozarabic rite calls for signing the forehead with ashes when admitting a gravely ill person to the Order of Penitents. At the beginning of the 11th century, Abbot Aelfric notes that it was customary for all the faithful to take part in a ceremony on the Wednesday before Lent that included the imposition of ashes. Near the end of that century, Pope Urban II called for the general use of ashes on that day. Only later did this day come to be called Ash Wednesday. 1

The Order of Penitents consisted of people who had committed a serious sin within the Christian community and who needed to repair their relationship with God before coming back to the Eucharist. During Lent, the penitents would repent for their sins and gain a fresh conversion.  At the same time, the Order of the Catechumens, new converts to the faith, would be learning their catechism in preparation for the sacraments of baptism and confirmation.  Like the catechumens who were preparing for Baptism, the penitents were often dismissed from the Sunday assembly after the Liturgy of the Word.  The early church fathers saw serious sin after baptism as a sign that a person’s conversion was not complete, therefore penance was a second chance at a complete conversion.  In this way, penance and baptism are essentially linked.

Lent developed in the Church as the whole community prayed and fasted for the catechumens who were preparing for Baptism. At the same time, those members of the community who were already baptized prepared to renew their baptismal promises at Easter, thus joining the catechumens in seeking to deepen their own conversion. It was natural, then, that the Order of Penitents also focused on Lent, with reconciliation often being celebrated on Holy Thursday so that the newly reconciled could share in the liturgies of the Triduum. With Lent clearly a season focused on Baptism, Penance found a home there as well. 1

Over time, we lost the Order of the Catechumens, and the emphasis shifted solely to penance even after the Order of Penitents was lost too.  It wasn’t until Vatican II that the Order of Catechumens was resurrected and with it, much of the underlying meaning of Lent which connects penance to baptism. 

For penance isn’t just about being wrong.  It’s about a true metanoia - the Greek word for "repent" which is so much more aptly descriptive than the Latin.  When I think of the word "repent" what often comes to mind is strange men on sidewalks wearing poster boards with apocalyptic messages, usually with "repent" written in big letters.  But that’s not really what it’s about.  Metanoia comes from two Greek words:  "meta", meaning "change", and "noia" meaning "mind".  Not in the sense that you change your mind about what you’re going to wear today. Metanoia is really about a change of innermost attitude.  It’s about a conversion - a reversion, if you will - to our relationship with God.  This is something that we, as Christians, are called to work on every day.  And this is why when the ashes are placed upon our forehead, the priest says, "Turn away from sin and be faithful to the Gospels."

  1. Ash Wednesday: Our Shifting Understanding of Lent
  2. New Advent Catholic Encyclopaedia: Ash Wednesday
  3. EWTN:  Lent

Topics: Catholic, Christianity, Lent, Prayer, Religion |

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