What is Ash Wednesday? What is the significance of Ash Wednesday? | Lent Fasting | FACTS DECODED What is Ash Wednesday? What is the significance of it? They may be ashes, but they have their own importance, and so go far beyond simple earthly dust. With a simple cross on the forehead, we acknowledge that we are far from perfect, but that God loves and redeems us—not despite, but in the midst of our brokenness. Follow this video to begin your Lent with a reminder of the deeper significance of Ash Wednesday. Ash Wednesday, the beginning of the penitential Lenten season, is a sobering reminder of human mortality and the need for reconciliation with God. It is often associated with ashes and fasting. Ash Wednesday, also known as the Day of Ashes, is a day of repentance in which Christians confess their sins and declare their commitment to God. During a Mass, a priest lays ashes in the shape of a cross on the worshiper's forehead. The Bible makes no mention of Ash Wednesday. However, there is a long-standing tradition of putting ashes as a gesture of penitence that precedes Jesus. Job repents “in dust and ashes“ in the Old Testament, and there are further references to ashes and repentance in Esther, Samuel, Isaiah, and Jeremiah. Ash Wednesday is the opening day of Lent in the Christian church, falling six and a half weeks before Easter. Ash Wednesday, the beginning of the penitential Lenten season, is a sobering reminder of human mortality and the need for reconciliation with God. It is often associated with ashes and fasting. The duration of the Lenten season fluctuated in the early Christian church, but it finally began 6 weeks (42 days) before Easter. This only allowed for 36 days of fasting (excluding Sundays). In the seventh century, four days were added before the first Sunday of Lent to create 40 fasting days in remembrance of Jesus Christ's fast in the desert. #factsdecoded #ashwednesday #lent #lentanseason #christianity #christianvideo #religion #lent2022 Subscribe to this channel:
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