Remember that you are dust and to dust, you shall return.
Later on today, I will impose ashes on the foreheads of those who are ancient of days and live in what used to be known as "Nursing Homes" but are now called "Extended Care Facilities" (ECF) or "Long Term Care Facilities" (LTCF).
They have long ago moved from - and some have forgotten - the homes they once lived in, and loved in, and made love in, and birthed and raised children in, and cooked fabulous meals in, and celebrated holidays and holy days in, and wept in and laughed in and cursed in and sang in.
And now, they share a room no bigger than their former living room with another who is also ancient of days, who cries out in the middle of the night for her children, or his comrades on the battlefield, or just simply, "Help me. Help me. Help me." until their voices are hoarse, yet they continue on in a whisper until the light of a new day filters in their room.
Maybe that's not so much the cry of the demented. Maybe they have seen something and know something we don't yet know and haven't yet seen.
Maybe asking for help is the most courageous thing they've ever said in the whole of their lives.
Maybe they are finally free to say it. Out loud.
All of their earthly possessions have been reduced and are now contained in one small closet and one four-drawer dresser, a bedside table, and a hospital bed.
And, implausible as it seems to ones who are younger than them, it is enough.
When I impose ashes on their foreheads and say the ancient words of this day, some will look away, others will look bored, but a few will look me right in the eye, silently accusing me of redundancy.
But there's always one - one ancient soul, whose memory has been replaced with wisdom (which may be the wisest thing), whose watery eyes will dance with some happiness, deeply hidden in the wrinkles and crevices of her face.
I will say, "Remember you are dust and to dust you shall return," and he will pat my hand and say, "Yes, yes, child," as if I am singing a freedom song.
And, perhaps I am. Perhaps that is the greatest wisdom scattered and hidden in the ashes I carry.
This pilgrimage we are on has a destination which is contained within itself. When we come to know that the journey is our home while we are here, there is a wonderful liberation. Or, so it seems.
All caution and disturbing memories and soul-wracking anxieties are thrown to the wind where it will be carried and scattered and somewhere, mingled with the light feathers of hope.
Remember that you are dust and to dust, you shall return.
Scattered amidst the song of the limits of our mortality is the song of our liberation as children of God.
If you quiet yourself and still your wildly beating heart, you will hear it and then you will know the freedom to love wildly, generously, lavishly, and wastefully, the way God loves us.
And you will find forgiveness for yourself and others.
And your soul will be free.
May that be your prayer as you being this Lenten Journey.
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