Episode 301 - Ashes for Treasure
Ash Wednesday

We begin with ashes — a sign as old as repentance itself. They mark the truth of what we bring: weakness, sin, mortality, and a heart in need of turning. Yet these outward signs mean nothing if the heart remains proud. The fast we enter is meant to be quiet, sincere, and interior — a realignment of the whole person toward God, not merely a display of discipline.
Christ does not tell us to abandon treasure. He tells us to seek it with all our strength — but to seek the treasure that cannot perish. Every act of love, holiness, mercy, and trust becomes a storehouse in heaven, carried beyond the grave. The season of Lent simply invites a strange exchange: we give God our sin, our distrust, our small sacrifices — and He offers us a kingdom.
It is, in the end, a question of trust. The enemy taught us to doubt God’s goodness, yet the Psalms remind us who He truly is — the one who stills the sea, feeds the valleys, and raises the poor from the dust. Lent begins with ashes, but only because God intends to fill empty hands with something far greater.