An inclusive community of theological
education and formation.

An inclusive community of theological education and formation.

What do the Ashes mean?

Ashes can be touched, smelled, felt as they are placed on the forehead, and
then the consciousness that they are visible on our foreheads to those who
look at us—they produce for a moment a strange religious self-consciousness.
The community who has received the ashes has become consciously
disfigured: it has, literally, dirt on its public face. This disfigurement of our
faces for a day is a perfect sacramental expression of our disfigurement as a
People of God in need of renewal.
 
Our inward disfigurement needing renewal (Lent) and rededication (Easter) is
matched by our outward disfigurement on Ash Wednesday: taking ashes is
taking on board our share in the responsibility for the sins of the whole
people, and declaring that we will work together toward renewal.
 
Thomas O’Loughlin, Liturgical Resources for Lent & Eastertide