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Maunday Thursday and Good Friday
Easter
Morning
The Journey
of LENT

A Sermon for Lent
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DAILY LENTEN MESSAGE FROM PASTOR PALMER ON YOUR CELL PHONE OR ON YOUR TWITTER
ACCOUNT
A Prayer for Ash Wednesday
Almighty God, you have created us out of the
dust of the earth. May these ashes remind us of our mortality and our sins and
teach us again that only by your gracious gift are we given everlasting life
through Jesus Christ, our Savior. Amen.
Where Dust
Touches Hope
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Taking the journey of lent is
about taking time to reorient ourselves to the blunt facts of reality.
Paradoxically, the first step towards catching glimpses of the wide open
spaces of eternity is to see clearly our own smallness and brokenness. The world tells us that the
way to success is to look out for number one, be aggressive, believe in
yourself, grab what you can before someone else gets it. It tells us that we
humans are the measure of all things, we are brilliant, we are all powerful,
we are gods. The bible tells us we are dust and ashes. The world’s view
sounds so right, so normal, so exciting, so empowering. But it ends in
cynicism, helplessness and despair. Scripture’s view sounds like such a
downer. But it ends in hope, confidence and joy. That’s the way truth works
– even hard truth. Ash Wednesday is an opportunity to return to a world view
based on reality, the world view that brings us both the utter starkness of
our mortality and the utter beauty of God’s redemptive power. It is a world
view of wide open spaces where we can begin to see everything in proper
perspective.
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Ash Wednesday marks
the beginning of the days of lent that last until Easter. It is a somber time
of contemplation & reflection as we contemplate our own mortality, and our
sinfulness. For Easter is the good news that Jesus has conquered both – both
our mortality and our sinfulness. It is only when I am willing to take
seriously my own mortality and my own sinfulness that I can take seriously the
joy of Easter.
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Lent is basically about remembering who we
are and who God is. Lent is where the dust of earth touches the hope of
God. We put ashes on our head as a declaration that we admit that we are
mortal, we are but animated dust. We are utterly dependant on God. And we
are finite and broken and bent. We are sinners. And God is God.
Be Still … And know that I am God …
So dust and ashes are a
symbol, a sign to remind us of two things:
Listen
for these themes of mortality, repentance and dust in our scriptures:
SCRIPTURE LESSONS
Job 42:1, 5-6
1 Then Job replied to the LORD…
5 My ears had heard of you but now my eyes have seen you.
6 Therefore I despise myself and repent in dust and ashes."
Jonah 3:5-6
5 The Ninevites believed God.
They declared a fast, and all of
them, from the greatest to the least, put on sackcloth.
6 When the news reached the king of Nineveh, he rose from his
throne, took off his royal robes,
covered himself with sackcloth
and sat down in the dust.
Psalm
103: 13-17
13 As a father has compassion on
his children, so the LORD has
compassion on those who fear him;
14 for he knows how we are formed, he remembers that we are dust.
15 As for man, his days are like grass, he flourishes like a flower of the
field;
16 the wind blows over it and it is gone, and its place remembers it no
more.
17 But from everlasting to everlasting the LORD's love is with
those who fear him, and his righteousness
with their children’s children…
In
addition, the ancient church practices various disciplines during Lent –
fasting, prayer vigils, good works. The idea was not to earn God’s favor or
work your way to heaven. The idea is to create a different way of living for
these 40 days. In other words, by doing one thing differently, you change the
rhythm of your day and your awareness of the world around you increases. For example
if you chose to fast one day or one meal a week during lent, every time you feel
hungry, you use that as a reminder to pray, to remember who God is and remember
who we are. Some people choose to give something up like food or alcohol or
chocolate, some people choose to add things like prayer or acts of mercy. The
key is do something different, do it every week, and do it not to punish
yourself, but to draw your attention off yourself onto the bigger world and who
God is.
Choosing to give something up for Lent is
like choosing to turn the lights off on the inside of your house during a starry
night. When the lights are on inside, you can't see anything outside your
window. When you turn the lights off, suddenly you can see the starlit
world around you. By eliminating the inward glow that comes from some comfort we can
suddenly see the stars outside ourselves. By taking our attention off our normal
routine we become aware of God and the world around us.

What
will you do for lent ?
Spiritual Disciplines for Lent
A Sermon for Lent
Daily Lenten Message
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