Wrong Thinking – Right Thinking

A homily for Ash Wednesday, February 14, 2024

When Jesus was entering Jerusalem, the people pulled down palm tree branches down and threw them before him.  We commemorate this on Palm Sunday by receiving palms.  And then just before Ash Wednesday we bring those palms back to church to burn them.  And I think it’s a great thing to burn them because, I think, the palms represent wrong thinking.  They wanted to make Jesus king like King David, or like Ceasar, or like King Herod.  They wanted a physical king who would drive out the Romans, give them economic security, and give them all jobs; and that’s not what Jesus came for.  It was wrong thinking.  So I think it’s great that we take palms and we burn them.  We burn these palms, and when they turn to ash, we put these palms on our heads to represent right thinking.  Because that is what, I think, Ash Wednesday and Lent is all about – right thinking.  We take these ashes and then we apply these ashes to our heads to say, ‘we’ve got to start thinking right.’  And we can have all sorts of wrong thinking.  We can think, nobody loves me, or I’m a loser, or everyone hates me.  Or we can have wrong thinking, I’m going to get revenge, or I’m going to get them, or I need all the money I can get.  It’s me first.  There’s tons of wrong thinking out there.  I think that’s what Ash Wednesday is about.  We put a cross of ashes on our foreheads to say, ‘let’s try right thinking for the season of Lent.’  

Carmelite Logo

Or Everything is Doomed

Carmelite homily for Ash Wednesday, February 14, 2024 – Lectionary 219 (Matthew 6:1-6,16-18)

Humility doesn’t mean being smarmy and allow people to walk all over you or to treat you like a doormat.  No!  Humility means not being controlled by your ego.  That’s what we see in today’s Gospel.  When you pray, don’t pray in front of everybody so everyone says, ‘look how holy she is.’  Or when you give gifts or donations don’t blow a trumpet or call attention to it so everyone says, ‘look how, how generous he is.’  Or when you’re fasting don’t look all beaten up so everyone can say, ‘look how god-focused she is.’  No, that’s all ego.  The idea is to not let ego control this, but to let love control this, God control this, the other control this, your heart control this.  This is the call for Ash Wednesday.  Saint Teresa of Avila writes, “If there is no progress in humility, everything is going to be doomed.”  Let’s make that the focus for this Lent – progress in humility.  Which means simply, don’t be controlled by your ego, be controlled by love. 

Saint Teresa of Avila