Today is Ash Wednesday. People will be noticed in the market place wearing a dark gray smudge on their forehead. It may even be in the sign of the cross. Ash Wednesday opens the door to the season of Lent. On Ash Wednesday liturgically minded Christians of many denominations will submit themselves to an ancient ritual known as the imposition of ashes. It is indeed a strange moment within the life of the church as its members gather to be reminded of their mortality.
"Remember you are dust and to dust you shall return," the priest will say as it looks people in the eye and marks them with ashes from the burning of last year's palm branches. For some stranger who walks into the service not really knowing what to expect, it can be a shocking, and perhaps, offensive moment. After all, who wants to die? Who among us, so sure we are going to live forever, wants to be reminded that we are going to die? Even as we are linked together in birth so are we linked together in death. The truth is we all need a dose of reality.
Being reminded that our life is fragile, finite, and temporal may be a way of enabling us to live more attentive to each day. Of course, there is no better one to tell us we are going to die than the church because it is also the one who tells us we are going to live. Even though we die; yet, shall we live is the core gospel message. At the end of the Lenten season, we will return to the church to celebrate the resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ who tells us that as surely as we die, we shall live because He has been enveloped in death's hold and overcome it. The victory He won is His gift to each one of us.