Ash Wednesday goes DIY at this church due to COVID-19 - Action News
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PEI

Ash Wednesday goes DIY at this church due to COVID-19

Ash Wednesday was a do-it-yourself affairat St. Paul's Anglican Church in Charlottetown, thanks to COVID-19.

St. Paul's in Charlottetown came up with 'bubble ashes' parishioners can take home

'We knew that we couldn't do what we had donein the past or at least it didn't feel right that we should' says Archdeacon John Clarke at St. Paul's Anglican Church in Charlottetown. (Sheehan Desjardins/CBC)

Ash Wednesday was a do-it-yourself affairat St. Paul's Anglican Church in Charlottetown, thanks to COVID-19.

Ash Wednesday is an important day for many Christians, marking the first day of the period of Lent leading up to Easter. Officiantsusually use a thumb or finger to mark the foreheads of the faithful with a smudge of ash, symbolizing death and repentance.

But not during a global pandemic.

"We knew that we couldn't do what we had donein the past or at least it didn't feel right that we should," said Archdeacon John Clarke, rector at St. Paul's Anglican Church. "Getting so close to somebody, imposing ashes on them."

The ashes come from burning the palm fronds from the previous year'sPalm Sunday, Clarke said.

So St. Paul'sdeveloped what Clarke calls "bubble ashes." Groups or bubbles of family and friends can take a small plastic cup from the Wednesday night service and use them at home.

'The ashes are made up of carbon, the building blocks of creation,' says Clarke of these small plastic containers of ashes St. Paul's is handing out for Ash Wednesday. (Sheehan Desjardins/CBC)

"They can use them asthey wish they can make the sign of the cross on their forehead, on the foreheads of the other people in their bubble, they can make the sign of a cross ona rock,or a piece of wood, or sprinkle them inthe garden or in a houseplant."

Clarke said he'd loveto hear other ways people use the ashes.

On P.E.I., churches that are able to do so safely are open, and are permitted to hostone or two cohorts of 50 people. Households on P.E.I. may host 10additional individuals as well as household members.

He said so far the reaction from parishioners has been positive.

Clarke said the pandemic has been a "huge challenge" for St. Paul's, especially as it is a very gregarious church known for its close-knit but very warm and welcoming atmosphere.

The ashes were created last Sunday from palm fronds used in the church's Palm Sunday service last year. (Sheehan Desjardin/CBC)

With files from Sheehan Desjardins