Ash Wednesday Memory

February 25th, 2009

It was Ash Wednesday in 1981 and I was a junior in high school. I’ll never forget the challenge given to my youth group at St. Augustine’s by our pastor. He challenged us to wear a symbol of the Lenten season all 40 days everywhere we went – school, town, movies – everywhere.

We each received a fairly good sized thorn to pin on our shirts. The message was that Christ wore his crown of thorns on Good Friday, so we would show our support for his sacrifice visibly. We were charged to never forget wearing it.

We all got off to a great start. It was actually fun to “educate” our non-Catholic friends on why we were wearing a “tree” on our shirts. Nobody derided us; it was actually great dialogue. Since we did it as a fairly large group, there was a sense of team.

I’m sure the good priest knew what would happen next. I’m guessing it was part of the lesson. On occasion, each of us would forget to pin on our thorn. When this happened, one of us would tear off a small piece and share. By the end of the 40 days, all of our thorns were about 75% gone!

The lesson – we all shared our sacrifice with each other. Not only had we been a visible symbol for Jesus, we had also been support for each other. When one fell (or simply forgot), we were there to pick each other up. In retrospect, I suspect this was the biggest lesson of all.

I look back and think, “Maybe I should wear that thorn again.” The reality is that without my team it wouldn’t be the same. However, because of that team, the memory and the lesson will live forever.

Have a great Lent.

Vivat Jesus,

Dan

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3 Responses to Ash Wednesday Memory

  1. Rick says:

    Nice metaphor of bearning each others burdens.

  2. Nod says:

    I think it's kinda cool.

  3. sabrina says:

    I wonder if kids today would do that? Do you think? (Reason I’m asking is I help with a confirmation class. What did these thorns look like and what were they made of?)

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