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Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Teaching for Life - The History of Ash Wednesday

Continuing with lessons about Lent, and Ash Wednesday which we will observe tomorrow, here is more information about the history of Ash Wednesday.

Again, if you have any questions or comments please post them here for everyone to see, it may be that someone else has the same question.

Like yesterday, for points, please read through this entire post and them make a comment/post attesting that you have read it.

-Wes
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Ash Wednesday marks the onset of the Lent, the 40-day period of fasting and abstinence. It is also known as the 'Day of Ashes'. So called because on that day at church the faithful have their foreheads marked with ashes in the shape of a cross.

The name 'Day of Ashes' comes from "Dies Cinerum" in the Roman Missal and is found in the earliest existing copies of the Gregorian Sacramentary. The concept originated by the Roman Catholics somewhere in the 6th century. Though the exact origin of the day is not clear, the custom of marking the head with ashes on this Day is said to have originated during the papacy of Gregory the Great (590-604).

In the Old Testament ashes were found to have used for two purposes: as a sign of humility
and mortality; and as a sign of sorrow and repentance for sin. The Christian connotation for ashes in the liturgy of Ash Wednesday has also been taken from this Old Testament biblical custom.  Receiving ashes on the head as a reminder of mortality and a sign of sorrow for sin was a practice of the Anglo-Saxon [English(Echurch in the 10th century. It was made universal throughout the Western church at the Synod of Benevento in 1091.

Originally the use of ashes to betoken penance was a matter of private devotion. Later it became part of the official rite for reconciling public penitents. In this context, ashes on the penitent served as a motive for fellow Christians to pray for the returning sinner and to feel sympathy for him. Still later, the use of ashes passed into its present rite of beginning the penitential season of Lent on Ash Wednesday.

There can be no doubt that the custom of distributing the ashes to all the faithful arose from a devotional imitation of the practice observed in the case of public penitents. But this devotional usage, the reception of a sacramental which is full of the symbolism of penance (cf. the cor contritum quasi cinis of the "Dies Irae") is of earlier date than was formerly supposed. It is mentioned as of general observance for both clerics and faithful in the Synod of Beneventum, 1091 (Mansi, XX, 739), but nearly a hundred years earlier than this the Anglo-Saxon homilist Ælfric assumes that it applies to all classes of men.

Putting a 'cross' mark on the forehead was in imitation of the spiritual mark or seal that is put on a Christian in baptism. This is when the newly born Christian is delivered from slavery to sin and the devil, and made a slave of righteousness and Christ (Rom. 6:3-18).

This can also be held as an adoption of the way 'righteousness' are described in the book of Revelation, where we come to know about the servants of God.The reference to the sealing of the servants of God for their protection in Revelation is an allusion to a parallel passage in Ezekiel, where Ezekiel also sees a sealing of the servants of God for their protection:

"And the LORD said to him [one of the four cherubim], 'Go through the city, through Jerusalem, and put a mark [literally, "a tav"] upon the foreheads of the men who sigh and groan over all the abominations that are committed in it.' And to the others he said in my hearing, 'Pass through the city after him, and smite; your eye shall not spare, and you shall show no pity; slay old men outright, young men and maidens, little children and women, but touch no one upon whom is the mark. And begin at my sanctuary.' So they began with the elders who were before the house." (Ezekiel 9:4-6)

Unfortunately, like most modern translations, the one quoted above (the Revised Standard Version, which we have been quoting thus far), is not sufficiently literal. What it actually says is to place a tav on the foreheads of the righteous inhabitants of Jerusalem. Tav is one of the letters of the Hebrew alphabet, and in ancient script it looked like the Greek letter chi, which happens to be two crossed lines (like an "x") and which happens to be the first letter in the word "Christ" in Greek Christos). The Jewish rabbis commented on the connection between tav and chi and this is undoubtedly the mark Revelation has in mind when the servants of God are sealed in it.

The early Church Fathers seized on this tav-chi-cross-christos connection and expounded it in their homilies, seeing in Ezekiel a prophetic foreshadowing of the sealing of Christians as servants of Christ. It is also part of the background to the Catholic practice of making the sign of the cross, which in the early centuries (as can be documented from the second century on) was practiced by using one's thumb to furrow one's brow with a small sign of the cross, like Catholics do today at the reading of the Gospel during Mass.

5 comments:

  1. Ok so the y do we do it if it is a catholic thing?

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  2. im wondering the same thing kristen is. Were not catholic, and Were learning about this is spanish as well...

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  3. i have and is wondering the same thing

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  4. Good Question on why do we celebrate this if it was originally started by the Roman Catholics. Like many of our church traditions, they are rooted in antiquity, in the history of the Christian faith, not necessarily in one denomination or another.

    Here's the important quote from the text of the lesson above:
    "Receiving ashes on the head as a reminder of mortality and a sign of sorrow for sin was a practice of the Anglo-Saxon [English(Echurch in the 10th century. It was made universal throughout the Western church at the Synod of Benevento in 1091."

    The Methodist church is what is known as a Protestant Church, in other words, it's not associated with the Roman Catholic Church. For background, the Protestant Reformation began with Martin Luther in 1517, but that's a lesson for another day. He's was originally a Roman Catholic Priest who "Protested" against the practices of the Catholic church at that time - the movement he started first created what we now know as the Lutheran church.

    Back to this topic, the practices of observing Ash Wednesday, as we will do tomorrow, really started in the 9th Century, i.e., 1091 as described above. At that time, there was only the Catholic church - all churches are essentially rooted in the Catholic church since that was, in effect, the first church created by St. Peter.

    So, yes, this practice was started as a Catholic practice and tradition, but it's part of the overall history of the whole church, Catholics and Protestant's included since it took place so long ago and has since been included in the history of even those denominations that eventually split from the Catholic church.

    I hope this makes sense and helps you understand it a little better.

    In Christ,

    Wes

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  5. That's Pretty cool thanks for answering it -christa

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