In the Roman Catholic Church, Ash Wednesday is the first day of Lent, the season of preparation for the resurrection of Jesus Christ on Easter Sunday. (In Eastern Rite Catholic churches, Lent begins two days earlier, on Clean Monday.)
While Ash Wednesday is not a Holy Day of Obligation, all Roman Catholics are encouraged to attend Mass on this day in order to mark the beginning of the Lenten season.
The Distribution of Ashes:
During Mass, the ashes which give Ash Wednesday its name are distributed. The ashes are made by burning the blessed palms that were distributed the previous year on Palm Sunday; many churches ask their parishioners to return any palms that they took home so that they can be burned.
After the priest blesses the ashes and sprinkles them with holy water, the faithful come forward to receive them. The priest dips his right thumb in the ashes and, making the Sign of the Cross on each person’s forehead, says, “Remember, man, that thou art dust, and to dust thou shalt return” (or a variation on those words).
A Day of Repentance:
The distribution of ashes reminds us of our own mortality and calls us to repentance. In the early Church, Ash Wednesday was the day on which those who had sinned, and who wished to be readmitted to the Church, would begin their public penance. The ashes that we receive are a reminder of our own sinfulness, and many Catholics leave them on their foreheads all day as a sign of humility.
Fasting and Abstinence Are Required:
The Church emphasizes the penitential nature of Ash Wednesday by calling us to fast and abstain from meat. Catholics who are over the age of 18 and under the age of 60 are required to fast, which means that they can eat only one complete meal and two smaller ones during the day, with no food in between. Catholics who are over the age of 14 are required to refrain from eating any meat, or any food made with meat, on Ash Wednesday.
Taking Stock of Our Spiritual Life:
This fasting and abstinence is not simply a form of penance, however; it is also a call for us to take stock of our spiritual lives. As Lent begins, we should set out specific spiritual goals we would like to reach before Easter and decide how we will pursue them—for instance, by going to daily Mass when we can and receiving the Sacrament of Confession more often.
Photo credit: Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons
Why is Ash Wednesday not a day of obligation in the catholic church yet every catholic is expected to at least attend church and receive ashes?
There is a major difference between “expected” and “encouraged.”
What’s your point?
I encourage peoples of Kenya that we can do it peacefully, remember last election 2007 there is post election here in my country that is why I erg for peace
it’s right and just I pray for peace especially in my country KENYA this time prepare for election.
Re: why it’s not a HDoO, I don’t KNOW this, but was saying last night to an elderly woman who couldn’t make it today that the rite was probably started up more to help teach and prepare the youth and young adults originally, because they’re not as familiar with suffering and death of the body as older people are. But as you age, you definitely understand (having seen plenty of funeral Masses) that this current vessel is going to turn back to ashes; and you experience the why of it (through the same funeral Masses); and you know why fasting is so important (to keep your priorities in order). So the elderly may not need the teaching as much (it may be like beating a dead horse, in fact, for those who’ve recently lost someone, or who are already physically suffering).
But I still think it’s very important for everyone to go when feasible. It’s a beautiful liturgy that many find uplifting.
(Well, I said all that, but then learned that the priest is going to the hospital today to impose ashes on my dad’s forehead, and he’s 81 and in poor health, so I may be super wrong!!!)
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