Ash Wednesday: A Sacred Threshold into Lent

Here we are…the journey begins.

This Wednesday, we step across a sacred threshold into a pilgrimage of the soul, a season of reflection, fasting, and renewal. It is a time to return to ourselves, to touch the truth of our impermanence, and to open our hearts to a deeper way of being.

On this day, known as Ash Wednesday, many receive the sign of ashes on their foreheads, along with these solemn words:

"Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return." (Genesis 3:19)

These ashes, made from the burned palm branches of last year’s Palm Sunday, hold a profound truth. Once waved in celebration, they now return to us as dust, teaching us about the fleeting nature of human praise, the impermanence of all things, and the need for a heart steadfast in truth. The ashes remind us that, like the palm branches, our earthly glories will fade.

This is a meditation on the cycles of life: joy and sorrow, triumph and loss, arising and passing away, life and death are interwoven. Nothing is permanent, yet nothing is ever truly lost.

The ashes remind us that impermanence is a gift.

Because life is fleeting, each moment is precious.

Because all things change, we are invited to transform, to renew, to awaken.

  • The tradition of using the burned palm branches from the previous year's Palm Sunday for Ash Wednesday is rich in symbolism and theological meaning.

    1. The cycle of repentance and redemption

    Palm Sunday commemorates Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem, when crowds welcomed Him as the Messiah by waving palm branches and shouting, “Hosanna!” (Matthew 21:9). However, just days later, many of these same people turned away, leading to His crucifixion.

    The burning of these palm branches and using them for Ash Wednesday highlights the contrast between human enthusiasm and human frailty. It reminds us how quickly we can shift from devotion to neglect, from faithfulness to losing our way, and thus underscores our need for reflection, renewal, and humility.

    2. The transformation of glory into penitence

    Palm branches symbolize victory, celebration, and honor, but on Ash Wednesday, they are reduced to ashes, a sign of mortality, humility, and repentance. This transformation mirrors the Lenten journey itself: a movement from pride to humility, from separation to wholeness, from self-reliance to reliance on God.

    It also connects to Jesus' journey:

    • The crowds once praised Him with palms.

    • But soon after, He was betrayed, crucified, and buried, reduced to dust in the eyes of the world.

    • Yet, through His death and resurrection, new life emerged, just as Lent leads us to Easter.

    3. A call to let go of what no longer serves

    Lent is a season of letting go of our attachments, our pride, distractions, and all that keeps us from deeper truth and wholeness. The burning of palm branches symbolizes this surrender: the letting go of past victories, ego-driven faith, or superficial spirituality in order to embrace a deeper, more authentic relationship with God.

    4. The biblical theme of fire as purification

    Fire is often used in the Bible as a symbol of purification and transformation:

    • “For he is like a refiner’s fire.” (Malachi 3:2)

    • “I will turn my hand against you; I will thoroughly purge away your dross and remove all your impurities.” (Isaiah 1:25)

    Burning the palms symbolizes this purifying process, our past joys and failures are both consumed, making way for something new.

Lent begins with Ash Wednesday because every path of transformation begins with awareness.

Before we can change, we must first stop and see clearly. This is the practice of mindfulness.

When we stop running, when we breathe, when we touch the present moment, we can recognize what needs to be let go. We can smile at our own suffering with compassion, and we can step gently toward renewal.


Though Ash Wednesday is a Christian tradition, its wisdom belongs to all of us.

Across spiritual traditions, ashes have long been a sign of mourning and cleansing, a symbol of humility and rebirth.

  • In Hindu and Buddhist rituals, ashes mark the impermanence of life and the dissolution of the ego.

  • In Indigenous traditions, fire and ash are agents of purification and renewal.

  • In Judaism, ashes were used as a sign of repentance and a return to the sacred.

They remind us that all things pass, yet every ending carries the seed of a new beginning. Through the fire of transformation, we are refined, we are made whole, we are renewed.

  • Ashes hold deep spiritual significance in many faith traditions beyond Christianity. Across cultures and religions, ashes symbolize impermanence, purification, humility, and transformation.

    Here are a few examples:

    1. Hinduism: Ash as purification & renunciation

    In Hindu tradition, ash (bhasma or vibhuti) is often used in rituals and spiritual practices. It symbolizes:

    • Detachment & renunciation: Many Hindu ascetics (sadhus) apply sacred ash on their foreheads as a sign of renouncing worldly attachments.

    • Purification: Ash from burnt offerings (havan) is sometimes applied to the body to purify and protect against negative forces.

    • Impermanence: It reminds practitioners that the body is temporary, but the soul is eternal.

    2. Buddhism: Ashes in impermanence & death awareness

    • Cremation & mindfulness of death: In many Buddhist cultures, cremation is common, and the ashes of the deceased are kept or scattered as a reminder of life’s impermanence.

    • Tibetan Buddhist rituals: Some monks create sand mandalas, intricate designs that are later swept into ashes to symbolize the transience of life.

    3. Judaism: Ashes as mourning & repentance

    • Biblical tradition: In the Hebrew Bible, ashes were a sign of mourning, repentance, and humility before God. For example, Job sat in ashes to express grief (Job 42:6), and in Jonah’s time, the people of Nineveh wore sackcloth and ashes to repent (Jonah 3:6).

    • Tisha B’Av: Some Jewish communities incorporate ashes into mourning rituals on this day, which commemorates the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem.

    4. Islam: Dust & humility before God

    • Ashes as a symbol of human fragility: The Quran reminds believers that humans were created from dust and will return to it (Surah 20:55).

    • Prostration on earthly elements: While ashes are not a formal ritual, many Muslims pray on natural elements, such as a small clay tablet (turbah) in some traditions, as a reminder of humility and connection to the earth.

    5. Indigenous traditions: Fire, ash, and transformation

    • Fire ceremonies: Many Indigenous cultures use fire as a sacred element in rituals, and ashes left behind are seen as symbols of transformation and the cycle of life and death.

    • Smudging & cleansing: While not always using ashes directly, some Indigenous spiritual practices involve burning sacred plants (like sage or cedar), with the ashes representing the purification of the space and self.

    Universal Meaning of Ashes

    Across traditions, ashes carry a common message: Everything is temporary, but from endings come new beginnings. Whether used in rituals of mourning, purification, or spiritual awakening, ashes call us to humility, reflection, and transformation.

Let us pause. Let us breathe.

Let us become fully present to this moment.

SPIRITUAL ASSIGNMENT: Ash Wednesday Challenge

Dear Pilgrims, as we step into this sacred season of Lent, I invite you to join in a simple yet powerful act: attending an Ash Wednesday service and receiving the ashes, a symbol of humility, transformation, and our return to the Divine.

The challenge?

Share a photo of yourself with the ash cross on your forehead in the WhatsApp group! Not as a display, but as a collective witness to this pilgrimage we are taking together. Let’s fill this space with these sacred marks, reminding each other that we are walking side by side on this path of reflection and renewal.

For those who do not attend Christian services, you are warmly invited to create your own ritual.

You might burn a small piece of paper with something you are ready to release this Lent (an old belief, a burden, a fear) and then use the ash to mark your forehead as a symbol of renewal and intention.

Whether through a church tradition or a personal ritual, let’s begin this journey with intention and commitment.

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Choosing Your Fast - Part 2/2