Ash Wednesday

Here is Lent, Our Favourable Time

Liturgical Cycle: A, B, C | Lectionary Cycle: I, II

Introduction

Greeting

The peace and reconciliation
of the merciful Father
be always with you. R/ And also with you.

Introduction by the Celebrant

1 “I Will Serve”

Today we begin our forty days of Lent, forty days of preparation for Easter. Why these forty days of penance? To return to our roots—to God, to our better selves—and consequently also to our neighbour. In many ways, we have tried to be our own gods, to decide for ourselves what is right or wrong, and we have ended up making ourselves the centre of the world at the expense of ourselves, of God and of neighbour. Now is the right time to return to God and to turn to the people around us. We express our brokenness and our readiness to change when, after the Gospel, we receive the ashes.

Note. The penitential rite is omitted, since the rite of the ashes is a rite of penance and conversion.

2. Away With All Masks

In many regions of the world, people celebrate carnival in the days before Lent with much noise and merrymaking. Often, they wear masks for the occasion. But today Lent begins, the time to put off our masks and to turn our face and heart to God and to people. In this holy season, we reflect on the true meaning of our lives. Who am I, and what am I living for? Am I living for God and the community? We shall be invited to receive ashes on our foreheads with the invitation, “Turn away from sin and be faithful to the Gospel.” Away then, with all masks and return to God, to your true self and to one another as God’s people.

3. Here is Lent, Our Favourable Time

Lent begins today. It is a “favourable time,” a season of grace. We are called to go up with Christ to Jerusalem, the place where he will suffer and die before he rises in glory. This means that we are called with him to suffer and die to ourselves, to sin and to give up the evil in and around us, so that we can rise, individually and as a community, to a deeper Christian life, become more available to God and to people, and capable of rendering service with love. The way is conversion and repentance. It is summed up in today’s Gospel as almsgiving, that is, caring for people; as praying, that is, listening to God’s word and giving it a response of love and commitment; and as fasting, that is, giving up our selfishness. We express our willingness to be converted when, after the Gospel, we receive the ashes.

Opening Prayer

Let us pray that this Lent
we may turn to God and to one another

(pause)

God our Father,
you know how often we try to go
our own selfish ways.
Do not allow us to live and die
for ourselves alone
or to close our hearts to others.
Help us to see ourselves and life as gifts from you.
Make us receptive to your word and your life
and make us grow in the mentality
of Jesus Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.

Responsorial Psalm

Psalm 51:3-4, 5-6ab, 12-13, 14 and 17

R. (see 3a)  Be merciful, O Lord, for we have sinned.
Have mercy on me, O God, in your goodness;
in the greatness of your compassion wipe out my offense.
Thoroughly wash me from my guilt
and of my sin cleanse me.
R. Be merciful, O Lord, for we have sinned.
For I acknowledge my offense,
and my sin is before me always:
"Against you only have I sinned,
and done what is evil in your sight."
R. Be merciful, O Lord, for we have sinned.
A clean heart create for me, O God,
and a steadfast spirit renew within me.
Cast me not out from your presence,
and your Holy Spirit take not from me.
R. Be merciful, O Lord, for we have sinned.
Give me back the joy of your salvation,
and a willing spirit sustain in me.
O Lord, open my lips,
and my mouth shall proclaim your praise.
R. Be merciful, O Lord, for we have sinned.

Alleluia Verse

Psalm 95:8

  • Glory and praise to you, Lord Jesus Christ!

If today you hear his voice,
Harden not your hearts.

  • Glory and praise to you, Lord Jesus Christ!

Prayers of the Faithful

Blessing of Ashes

Introduction by the Celebrant

These palm leaves have turned from green branches into gray ashes. This is the way it goes with us. We do not remain the same. We grow older, we make life gray and dusty for ourselves and for others. These ashes remind us of the brittleness of life, of our guilt and the penance we need. We will humbly receive these ashes as we are marked with the sign of the cross, for our hearts are willing to follow Jesus on the way of self-denial and love.

Prayer of Blessing

Bless + these ashes, Lord,
as the sign of conversion and penance,
as the token that we want
to discover your Son today
in the silence of our prayer
and in our neighbor,
whom we encounter in his needs.
Let the sign of the cross,
given in the name of the Father,
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit
encourage and heal us,
so that we may serve you and our neighbor
by the strength of Jesus Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.

The priest sprinkles the ashes in silence. Then follows the imposition of ashes:

"Turn away from sin and be faithful to the Gospel."

 

Intercessions

At the beginning of this season of conversion, we look forward to reconcilia­tion with God and our neighbor. Let us bring before our Father our cares and the needs of all, and let us say:
R/ Have mercy on your people, Lord.

For the Church of Jesus Christ, that it may be freed from human short­comings so that it can show to all the light and the power of the Gospel, let us pray:
R/ Have mercy on your people, Lord.

For people far and near who are stuck in sin and discouragement, that they may find reconciliation with God, with themselves, and with the people around them, let us pray:
R/ Have mercy on your people, Lord.

For those hardened by riches or power and insensitive to the needs of others, that in these forty days of penance they may discover ways of true happiness through generosity to their neighbor, let us pray:
R/ Have mercy on your people, Lord.

For all those who bear a heavy load of suffering and cares, that they may go with courage the way of the Lord Jesus, let us pray:
R/ Have mercy on your people, Lord.

For one another, that each of us may be ready to go the way of peace and reconciliation, of service and commitment, let us pray:
R/ Have mercy on your people, Lord.

Lord our God, every year you give us new opportunities to grow in love of you and our neighbor. Give us the strength to live these forty days in the spirit of Jesus our Lord. R/ Amen.

Prayer Over the Gifts

God our Father,
your Son Jesus gave up everything
to be free for you and for people.
We bring these gifts of bread and wine before you
as signs that we want to be free
to live for you and for those around us.
Accept these offerings, and make them
Bread of happiness and Wine of joy
for our world today.
We ask this in the name of Jesus the Lord. R/ Amen.

Invitation to the Lord’s Prayer

Let us pray to our merciful Father
that we may forgive others
as he has forgiven our sins through Jesus. R/ Our Father...

Deliver Us

Deliver us Lord, from every evil
and grant us the peace of reconciliation
with you and with people far and near.
Help us to make up for the harm
we have done to others
and to live in hope and joy
for the future you have prepared for us
through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. R/ For the kingdom...

Invitation to Communion

This is Jesus the Lord,
who went before us to show
the way of forgiveness and love.
Let us receive him with joy,
for he is our strength. R/Lord, lam not worthy...

Prayer after Communion

Our merciful God,
we are afraid of facing ourselves
and giving up our attachments
to our selfish ways.
We have heard Jesus’ words
and eaten his body.
May these help us rise from the ashes of sin
and renew our fervor and love,
that we may follow him
on the narrow road of life
to you and to others.
We ask this in this season of grace
through Jesus Christ our Lord. R/ Amen.

Blessing

Only God can make us whole again
from our brokenness.
Only God can give us the insight
to discover how often we are alienated
from him, from others, even from our true selves.
Only God can give us the strength
to change our ways and to become all new.
May the living and loving God bless you:
the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. R/ Amen.

Go in peace and may Christ be your strength. R/ Thanks be to God.

REFLECTIONS

Return to Roots

We begin Lent today. “Return to me,” he says. “But where are you, Lord, so that we can return?” we ask. “Look into your heart and hearth,” he says. He waits within, in the entrails, while we seek him overseas, in the exteriors. During the season of Lent 2020, through the terror of pandemic COVID-19, we were taught this painful truth that God is not primarily in our external celebrations or fanciful pontifications or pompous liturgies, but in the ‘sound of sheer silence’ as Elijah had once encountered. Coronavirus drove us away from external celebrations and we learned to practice our faith with certain interiority. We shared our food without trumpeting it to the world, we shut ourselves in and prayed through sighs and groans, we washed each other’s feet within the families, our domestic churches. We shall re-discover such authentic interiority during this Lent as well, without any tragedies forcing us to learn. A fruitful Lent to you.

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ASH WEDNESDAY

Rising from the Ashes

Today, as we begin the sacred season of Lent, we are reminded of a profound truth: we are dust, and to dust we shall return. The ashes placed on our foreheads are not just a symbol but a call to humility, repentance, and renewal. They remind us that life is fleeting and that our journey must be one of transformation—a movement away from pride and self-centeredness toward humility and dependence on God.

Lent is not simply about giving things up or performing external rituals. Jesus invites us into a deep, interior conversion—one that involves fasting, prayer, and almsgiving as paths to real change. Fasting is not just about food; it is about disciplining our desires so that our spirit may be stronger than our worldly inclinations. What are we willing to let go of—not just in our diet, but in our hearts? Perhaps it is time to fast from negativity, gossip, distractions, or selfishness.

Almsgiving is not just about donating things we no longer need. It is about giving of ourselves, being more present to those in need, and making sacrifices that bring life to others. How can we give more of our time, love, and attention to those who need it most?

And finally, prayer—the heart of our Lenten journey. Without prayer, fasting and almsgiving become empty actions. This is the time to return to Jesus with sincerity, to seek His mercy, and to renew our relationship with Him.

Let this Lent be a time of true transformation, not just an external observance. May our sacrifices lead us to a renewed heart, one that beats in rhythm with Christ’s love. Something good is on the way—our return to the Lord.

Rising from the Ashes  - Youtube

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