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Ash Wednesday: The Courage to Look Within

February 13, 2026 by Rev. Dr. Kelly Jackson Brooks. LPCC Uncategorized 0 comments

Today’s reflection arrives at a meaningful threshold. Today marks the 100th Chrysalis Constant Contact posting—a quiet milestone that mirrors the spirit of the upcoming Advent season itself. One hundred offerings of reflection, invitation, and presence. Not to impress. Not to accumulate. But to create space—again and again—for honesty, healing, and holy reflection. Like Lent, Chrysalis has never been about having all the answers, but about returning to the inner work that forms us over time.

Ash Wednesday arrives quietly, marked not by fanfare but by ashes—dust traced on foreheads, ancient words whispered: “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.” It is a day that invites honesty. Not performance. Not productivity. Honesty.

In Matthew 6, Jesus speaks directly to the temptation to perform our faith for others. He names the subtle ways we seek validation—through generosity that is noticed, prayers that impress, fasting that draws admiration. Again and again, Jesus says: go inward. Pray in secret. Give quietly. Fast without display. Not because these practices are unimportant, but because their power is lost when they become masks.

Ash Wednesday echoes that call. The ashes remind us that beneath every role we play—leader, caregiver, achiever, helper—we are human. Finite. Vulnerable. In mental health language, this is a day that gently disrupts our coping strategies of perfectionism, people-pleasing, and emotional over-functioning. It asks: Who are you when no one is watching? How are you really doing?

Jesus’ invitation to secret practices is not about isolation – it is about integrity. It is about creating space where our inner life can tell the truth. For many of us, especially those accustomed to caring for others, the inner world is often ignored until it demands attention through exhaustion, anxiety, or numbness. Lent begins not with self-improvement but with self-awareness.

When Jesus says, “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also,” he is not issuing a moral threat but offering a diagnostic tool. Our treasure is what we cling to when we feel afraid or depleted. Ash Wednesday invites us to notice what we have been storing up as emotional insurance, and whether it is actually sustaining us.

The ashes do not shame us. They free us. They tell the truth without condemnation – you are limited, and you are loved. You do not have to prove your worth. You do not have to carry everything alone. Lent is not about adding more spiritual tasks; it is about releasing what no longer gives life.

This season begins with a pause, a deep breath, and a willingness to look inward with compassion. In that quiet place, Jesus meets us not with demands, but with grace enough for the journey.

Blessings,
Kelly

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