I'm thinking this morning, still, of dust and ashes. I don't dust all that much around the house, which I'm sure is a glaring fault. I am sure that other people dust regularly, even the parts of the house that are hidden, like behind the curios and knickknacks or along the baseboards. I read somewhere that the dust of our home contains our skin cells, which makes me look at Pigpen, the Charlie Brown character, more sympathetically.
Last night at the Ash Wednesday service, we spoke of being dust and returning to dust. I suppose in light of the skin cell business we might say that is literally true. But I can't shake the fact that stars are made from dust, and more importantly, if humanity is dust, we are surely some beloved dust. Precious enough to be animated by the Divine breath. Important enough for God to die for.
Wordsworth wrote:
| Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting: | |
| The Soul that rises with us, our life's Star, | 60 |
| Hath had elsewhere its setting, | |
| And cometh from afar: | |
| Not in entire forgetfulness, | |
| And not in utter nakedness, | |
| But trailing clouds of glory do we come | 65 |
| From God, who is our home: |
As this bit of dust reaches skyward in Lenten disciplines, may we all remember that we are children of dust, and also, children of God. If we are in fact trailing clouds of dust, for all who are born have started the clock to that dusty mortal return, perhaps, too, we are trailing clouds of glory, from God, who knew us and loved us from before we were born, and who knows and loves and carries us through this and every season. Thanks be to God, who gives us the victory in our Lord Jesus Christ.
