Thursday 10 March 2011

Ash Wednesday: You Only Live Once

The Ash Wednesday words "From dust you came and to dust you shall return" have particular resonance for this Anglican agnostic. You only live once; you're here and then you're gone; therefore "turn from sin and be faithful to Christ."

It's a call to seize the moment, to begin a quest to make our own meaning out of life's meaninglessness, turn away from the things that hinder us, do what we know we should do, live how we know we should live, and be as we know we should be. Why? Because we only live once. It's our one and only shot.

I wish there were a literal resurrection and that life really were a journey towards an afterlife, but I don't have any reason to think it is. The Lenten journey -- from Ash Wednesday's brutal confrontation with life's fleeting nature, through the agony of Maundy Thursday and the death of Good Friday, to the resurrection of Easter Sunday -- is a journey from meaninglessness to meaning, from the bare bones of existence to a life that matters.

1 comment:

  1. At least in our part of the world we can see new life appearing (as if a resurrection) in the arrival of the twittering birds, lambs in the fields, spring flowers blooming and plants reviving after appearing half-dead following winter. It brings me joy to witness the coming to life in spring...and co-incides with the easter message (although I'm with you regarding the resurrection/afterlife).

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