Today
is Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent. This forty-day season leading up to
Easter is traditionally a time of spiritual reflection and fasting. Though few
people actually fast for Lent these days, many do give up something they enjoy.
Some
churches hold an Ash Wednesday service where people have the mark of the cross
made in ashes on their foreheads as a sign of repentance. It’s a ceremony that recalls the ancient
practice of putting on sackcloth and ashes to acknowledge sins and to show
sorrow for them.
In
day-to-day life, admitting we’ve made a mistake is not always an easy thing to
do. Instead we protest that ‘it wasn’t my fault,’ and we look for someone else
to blame. Blaming someone else is actually something that society encourages us
to do. Only the other day I was handed a leaflet that asked: ‘Have you had an
accident in the last eighteen months that wasn’t your fault?’ That’s just one
symptom of the so-called ‘a blame-culture’. Of course, it’s not an entirely new
thing – as long as there have been people, there have been people to
blame! As the old story goes: Adam
blamed Eve, Eve blamed the snake, and the snake didn’t have a leg to stand on!
Now
there are times when people have a good case for blaming others. But we can’t always point the finger at someone else
- sometimes we are at fault. We need
to recognise that and take responsibility for our own actions – responsibility
before others and before God.
That,
I think, is what Lent is about. Giving up something for Lent can be helpful,
but it can also just become a re-run of our failed New Year’s resolutions. For
Lent to be really meaningful we need to do more than ‘give up’ - we need to be
honest enough to ‘own up’.
Lieut-Colonel Jonathan Roberts
Assistant to the Secretary for Scotland
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