Reflecting on the meaning of the ashes traditionally
imposed on the heads of the faithful, Leo recalled a 1966 catechesis by St.
Paul VI, who described the public celebration of the rite as a “severe and
striking penitential ceremony” and as “a realistic pedagogy,” intended to cut
through modern illusions and widespread pessimism that can reduce life to “the
metaphysics of the absurd and of nothingness.”
“Today, we can
recognize that his words were prophetic as we perceive in the ashes imposed on
us the weight of a world that is ablaze, of entire cities destroyed by war,”
Leo said.
He said that
devastation is echoed in “the ashes of international law and justice among
peoples,” “the ashes of entire ecosystems and harmony among peoples,” “the
ashes of critical thinking and ancient local wisdom,” and “the ashes of that
sense of the sacred that dwells in every creature.”
In the same
homily, the pope urged Catholics to treat Lent as a time when the Church is
renewed as a true community, even as modern society finds it harder to come
together in communion.
Leo stressed
that sin is never only private because it shapes and is shaped by the real and
digital environments people inhabit. “Naturally, sin is always personal, but it
takes shape in the real and virtual contexts of life… and often within real
economic, cultural, political, and even religious ‘structures of sin,’” he
said. Against idolatry, he added, Scripture calls Christians to dare to be free
and to rediscover freedom through “an exodus, a journey,” rather than remaining
“paralyzed, rigid, or complacent.”
The pope also
pointed to what he described as a renewed attentiveness among young people to
Ash Wednesday’s call to accountability.
“Young people
especially understand clearly that it is possible to live a just lifestyle, and
that there should be accountability for wrongdoings in the Church and in the
world,” he said, urging Catholics to “start where we can, with those who are
around us,” and to embrace “the missionary significance of Lent” for “the many
restless people of goodwill” seeking genuine renewal.
The pope also
highlighted the ancient Roman tradition of the Lenten station churches, which
begins each year with Santa Sabina. “The ancient Roman tradition of the Lenten
‘stationes’ — which begins today with the first station — is instructive,” he
said, noting that it points both to moving, as pilgrims, and to pausing —
‘statio’ — at the memories of the martyrs on which Rome’s basilicas were built.
This
story was first published by ACI Stampa, the
Italian-language sister service of EWTN News, and has been translated and
adapted by EWTN News English.

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