Ash Wednesday Address

Texts: Joel 2:12-19; Revelation 7:9-14

Recently I read that the worldwide apparel industry is valued at $3 Trillion dollars; that’s 3,000 billion and accounts for 2 percent of the world’s gross domestic product. We love our clothes. Take a walk through the shopping mall and you’ll see one clothing store after another, offering one style of garment after another. As a matter of fact, there’s even a Church liturgical clothing company that offers something close to designer clergy shirts, if you want to part with $100 bucks for one shirt for your pastor.

Can you imagine if there was only one clothing store selling only one style of clothing intended for all people? How would we express our individuality? How would we strut our stuff? How would we survive without the rags and coverings of our choice?

But what are we covering up? The coverings may be beautiful, but what lurks beneath? The easy answer is that we are covering our nakedness because we are modest and proper, but there is more to it than that. In the Scriptures, coverings, garments, and clothing that cover nakedness are in reality covering our shame. Adam and Eve partook of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil in the garden, and they realize their nakedness. Suddenly, they know their sin, and because of that knowledge, they are ashamed. As a result, they sewed together fig leaves as clothing so the Lord God would not see their shame, in an attempt to keep Him from discovering their sin when He walks through the garden. It didn’t work because it was the wrong kind of garment.

We wear our beautiful clothes to hide our nakedness. We believe we can deceive God and He will not notice our shame. We want to be responsible. We want to cover our sin. But it doesn’t work. Our man-made garments are but filthy rags. And what they attempt to cover is even worse.

You see, our heart is filled with sin and shame. If the desires of our heart were made known for all to see, we would indeed be ashamed. Evil thoughts, sexual desires, selfish wants, impure motives, jealousy, anger, envy, drunkenness, strife, idolatry; need I go on? This is the condition of our heart, of our inner being that we seek to hide, to attempt cover with our man-made clothing. Yet, man is not able, he is not capable of hiding the truth from God. We may fool those around us, and we may be fooled by those around us, but the Lord God sees the condition of all hearts.

From dust, we came, and to dust, we shall return. Man is born into this world a sinner, and his journey is back to the ground, back to dust. All of our attempts to cover up our sin, every effort to pay up always results in the same destination: dust. Born to die, we are dust, and to dust, we shall return.

It’s into this sorry spiritual state of affairs that the Prophet Joel speaks. The people of Israel have wandered away from their God. They have been unfaithful in every way. They have sought other gods, they played the harlot; bottom line, they are guilty of adultery against their Lord God. So the Lord is going to unleash disaster upon them. They will be oppressed and persecuted. They will become a byword for the world to mock God. They will suffer want and will weep in their distress. So, Joel calls out, “Rend your hearts and not your garments.” The ancient tradition was to express terrible anxiety and distress by tearing your garments, thereby revealing your state of sorrow. But Joel knows that the rending of garments will only reveal the problem: a corrupt and sinful heart.

A torn garment shows the problem.

A torn heart begins to heal the problem.

Rend your hearts and not your garments! Put on sackcloth and ashes.

Repent! Return to the Lord!

King David tells us in Psalm 51, “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, You will not despise.”

Repent! Return to the Lord. Yes, it’s a journey, a Lenten journey, a return from exile. Our sin has separated us from our God. It creates a dividing wall of hostility that destroys the relationship between God and us. Our sin has exiled us from the presence of the Lord. He has seen our sin and knows our shame, and that sin and shame have exiled us from the presence of God.

Return to the Lord with repentant hearts. Put on sackcloth and ashes — that is, repent.

So we have gathered here this afternoon to put on ashes, to repent of our sin. We know our sin, and it is ever before us. We know the sorry condition of our blackened hearts. We know that we, of our own strength and power, cannot return from our sin-stained exile. We know we cannot return to the presence of our God. The ashes remind us of our sin. They remind us of the condition of our hearts. They remind us of how we constantly approach our relationship with God on our terms, and not His. These ashes remind us of our own adultery against God. We cannot fix this sinful mess on our own. But ashes in the sign of the cross remind us of a gracious and merciful God.

We who are helpless and hopeless sinners are told, “Return to the LORD your God, for He is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love” (Joel 2:13). We, who can do nothing, have a God who has willingly done everything. Ashes show our sin; ashes in the sign of the cross show us the true nature of our God.

The cross! An instrument of torture and death and the means by which God has chosen to cleanse our hearts and exchanged our garments.

The cross — the place where Jesus is raised up in our place.

The cross — the place where Jesus is stripped of His robe and all of our sin is revealed as He hangs naked in our stead. He who knew no sin became sin for us. We attempt to cover our sin, even justify it, but Jesus reveals it so that it might be washed away by His blood. Surely He has borne our griefs and carried our sorrow. Ashes in the sign of the cross.

A gracious and merciful God has offered up His only-begotten Son so that the sin that has exiled us from His presence might be washed away and we might be restored to His presence — a return from exile, a Lenten journey. And where does this journey end? Not at the cross, not even at the empty tomb; the journey ends in the courts of heaven!

Listen to the words of St. John as he describes those who are gathered around the throne of the Lamb in His kingdom:

After this I looked, and behold, a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, with palm branches in their hands, and crying out with a loud voice, “Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!” And all the angels were standing around the throne and around the elders and the four living creatures, and they fell on their faces before the throne and worshiped God, saying, “Amen! Blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor and power and might be to our God forever and ever! Amen.” (Revelation 7:9-12)

Did you notice the great multitude who wave palm branches as they worship their Savior? Did you notice that they are clothed in white robes? These are no fig leaves they wear; they are not adorned in filthy rags. They are clothed in white robes, robes that have been cleansed, robes that have been washed in the blood of the Lamb. Their garments of sackcloth have been exchanged for robes of righteousness.

The sackcloth and ashes are gone, for Christ’s journey to the cross clothes His Bride, the Church. It is the blood of Jesus that washes away sin.

The blood of Jesus cleanses us from all unrighteousness.

The blood of Jesus washes our robes and makes them white.

Jesus Himself said of His blood: “Take and drink, this is the blood of the covenant shed for the forgiveness of sins.“

Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb.

Blackened, corrupt hearts covered by fig leaves of our own ideas of what our relationship with God should be like is the cause of our exile. Exiled from the presence of God, ashes are placed on our foreheads. We come before God with repentant hearts. And God is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love. He gives His Son to suffer in our place. Jesus endures the cross in our stead. Blood is shed, holy and precious blood that washes away and cleanses from all sin, where we will hear: “Take and drink, this is given for you for the forgiveness of your sins.” The result? Our hearts are restored. Our sackcloth and ashes are exchanged for garments of salvation and robes of righteousness. The exile is over, the journey is finished. We are returned to the presence of our God, and we rejoice in the robes the Bridegroom has provided for His Bride.

In Jesus’ name. Amen.

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