Tags
Ash Wednesday, ashes, care, community, dust, dusty, finitude, God, healing, mortality, music, organ, spiritual life, vulnerability

Last year our parish was donated a new pipe organ. We have been eagerly waiting for the deconstruction of our current organ and the installation of the new one. The time has finally come, we said a prayer of blessing on the current organ, and we have been waiting and watching as the process begins. Ideally this wouldn’t be staring just days before Ash Wednesday, but I suppose there is no “perfect” time to deconstruct your worship space.
Knowing we are in a liminal time of deconstruction and reconstruction, I had not thoroughly thought through the impact this time would have on our experience of Ash Wednesday. But walking into the Chapel this morning, seeing the pipes mostly gone, and the guts of our current organ exposed, I was hit by a sadness I couldn’t quite place. Almost 20 years of music from that organ has filled our worship space, countless talented individuals have made the organ sing, and even more moments of sacred encounters with God have happened through that instrument. Seeing the organ exposed today did something that left me unsettled.
When I necessarily turned my attention to preparing for tonight’s Ashes to Go and Ash Wednesday service, I realized what was so unsettling. Ash Wednesday is all about reminding us of our mortality, our finitude, and our vulnerability before God. When those gritty ashes are scraped across my forehead and I am told that I will return to dust, that texture and those words linger with me. So too, as that organ case sits gaping and open, with dust motes floating in the air, our worship space has suddenly become the perfect metaphor for entering a Holy Lent.
I wonder what gaping holes Ash Wednesday is exposing for you. I wonder where your spiritual life is feeling dusty and in need of some care. As always, you are most welcome to engage at Hickory Neck Episcopal Church for some tending – to find a connection with God that might be missing, to heal some holes that have been exposed for too long, and to find a place of belonging, because, believe me, you are not alone. Welcome to Lent.



