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Preaching for Ash Wednesday

Preaching by Sr. Annie Killian, OP

"Gather the people... Call an assembly!" Together we'll weep for our neighbors living in fear and mourn the destruction of our land. In our own day, we hear voices around the world echoing the Prophet Joel's cry to come together and lament. Increasingly, people are gathering to march, sit in, and stand vigil, calling for an end to war and genocide, detention and deportation, fascism and corporate greed. People are mobilizing on a mass scale to demand justice and show solidarity. They're asking the world to turn away from violence.

As people of faith, we see the connection between nonviolent protests today and the long biblical tradition of communal fasting and repentance. On Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, the church gathers to "proclaim a fast." For the prophets, fasting was less about individual self-denial and more about restoring right relationship among the community. Act with kindness and compassion. Don't oppress the immigrant or day laborer. Stop plotting evil against one another in your hearts (Zech. 7:9-10). "Be reconciled."

The prophets' emphasis on community and public witness might seem to conflict with today's Gospel in which Jesus urges the disciples to give alms and pray in secret, not in the streets. He's concerned about their motive. He criticizes the hypocrites who believe in their own superiority--they think their prayers and almsgiving make them better than other people. By drawing attention to themselves, they make others feel "less than." Jesus wants the disciples to remain humbly aware of the equality of all believers before God. When we're trying to outdo one another, it keeps us from working together for the common good.

False belief in the superiority of one group over others leads to violence. Peace begins when we recognize that all are created with equal dignity and the right to life. Pope Leo XIV has made the peace of Christ a central theme of his pontificate. For the 2026 World Day of Peace, he wrote, this "peace that is unarmed and disarming... comes from God who loves us all unconditionally... It finds its way into every human heart... it wants to dwell within us... it resists and overcomes violence."

This Lent, we're invited to discover peace already dwelling within us and create more room in our hearts for peace to grow. Violence is rooted in the desire to dominate, to wield power over others. Peace liberates us to seek the common good, to build power with others as equals. These forty days, we turn with all our hearts to God's gift of peace.

5 thoughts on “Preaching for Ash Wednesday

  1. Sr. Anne, I pulled this phrase from your message. ‘ For the prophets, fasting was less about individual self-denial and more about restoring right relationship among the community. ‘
    That is like a mantra of mine. I love your big smile that captures my attention.
    Peace, Rose Mary

  2. Anne, I’m grateful for the broad & inclusive sweep of your Lenten message—roomy & open to new and creative ways to fast, to serve, to pray. It keeps a community focus—we can’t keep Lenten all by ourselves w/ a perfect program of Lenten practices alone. Blessings on your ministry there!
    Ellen , op

  3. Thank you so much, Annie, for sharing this powerful reflection with us! Your comments on the prophecy of Joel resounded for me, and they invite us to reflect and then to act in ways that will draw us closer to God’s call and plan for us.
    Love and Prayers,
    Pat, OP

  4. Dear Annie,
    So appreciate your words that “peace liberates us to seek the Common Good and to build power with others as equals,”
    This will be my prayer intention during this lent. I see this in many people today walking for peace from one state to another.
    Thank you so much for your preaching,
    Brigid, OP

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