• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Building Faith

Building Faith

  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • Who We Are
    • Our Writers
    • Author Guidelines
    • FAQs
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
  • ARTICLES
    • Articles by Topic
    • Most Recent Articles
  • EN ESPAÑOL
  • RESOURCES
    • Curriculum Center
    • Vacation Bible School
    • Webinars
    • Episcopal Teacher
    • Signs of Life
    • Meeting Jesus in the Gospel of John
    • 5 Marks of Love
    • Growing a Rule of Life
    • It’s Time To…
  • SUPPORT US
  • Show Search
Hide Search
Home/Home Practices/Ash Wednesday Bonfire at Home

Ash Wednesday Bonfire at Home

“Once the papers are no longer visible, say to each other: Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”

 

Fire and Ashes

In many liturgical traditions Ash Wednesday is marked by a formal worship service in which the priest or church leader will make the sign of the cross on the foreheads of the congregants. Often the ashes are palm fronds that have been burned from the previous year’s Palm Sunday service. The purpose of this service is to mark the beginning of the Lenten season of repentance and reflection.

An at-home Ash Wednesday fire can be done around a small fire pit in any backyard, on a roof top, on the beach, or on your deck. The activity can be large-scale with a community; or small-scale around a group of candles or indoor fireplace. The point is not how grand your fire, but instead that you make time for the occasion in the first place.

Materials Needed

  • A fire
  • Marshmallows
  • Sticks
  • Pieces of paper
  • pencils, markers, or crayons

How To Do It

1. Toasting Marshmallows
Everyone loves to make s’mores and toast marshmallows over an open fire! But have you ever watched a marshmallow burn to a crisp? A marshmallow that has been burned on the outside is still soft and white on the inside, so much softer than it was before.  This is a great tactile example of how God uses the “refining fires” of life (pain, loss, change, love, etc) to soften our hearts and loosen our grip on the illusion of control. Consider roasting marshmallows to a crisp, explaining this illustration as you do so.

2. Burning of Confessions

Somewhere near your fire, perhaps on a small table, provide all those in attendance with pencil and paper and with a small sign that prompts each person to write down those things that they would like to confess, to have burned away from their past, that they feel a call to repent of. Make sure to have markers and crayons on hands for children. Have younger children draw out their confessions.

Have everyone crumple up and toss their confessions into the fire, or put them on the end of a roasting stick. As they add their confessions to the fire, have each person recite this Psalm:

“God, make a fresh start in me, shape a Genesis week from the chaos of my life”
(Psalm 51:10, The Message).

3. Concluding
When everyone has added their confessions to the fire, take time to watch them burn in silence. Once the papers are no longer visible, say to each other “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”

After the fire has cooled, return the ashes to the earth, perhaps in a garden area, where something new will spring from among the ashes.

 


Jerusalem Jackson Greer is a writer, speaker, nest-fluffer, novice farm-gal, and author of A Homemade Year: The Blessings of Cooking, Crafting and Coming Together. She is also the Minister to Children, Youth, and Families at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in Conway, Arkansas. Jerusalem lives with her husband and two sons on a little farm in Shady Grove, Arkansas. As a family, they are attempting to live a slower version of modern life. She blogs about all of this and more at http://jerusalemgreer.com

This activity comes from Jerusalem’s book A Homemade Year: The Blessings of Cooking, Crafting and Coming Together.

Photo © Judea Jackson, all rights reserved.

 

About the Author

  • Jerusalem Greer

    View all posts
Print PDF

February 3, 2016 By Jerusalem Greer

Filed Under: Home Practices, Lent Tagged With: Ash Wednesday, Confession, faith at home, Home practices, Lent

Primary Sidebar

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • RSS

Subscribe to Building Faith

You’ll get new articles, plus free weekly updates in your inbox.

We respect your privacy. View our privacy policy here.

Search Our Site

New Articles

Close-up of a glass jar with a view from its mouth lying sideways on a tan-colored floor with numerous coins inside the jar and in front of it

Building Faith’s Favorite Free Christian Formation Resources

Christian formation does not have to be costly. Yet finding formation resources that are …

Continue Reading about Building Faith’s Favorite Free Christian Formation Resources

Skyward view of a tree with brown bark, branches spreading in all directions, and green leaves

“Faith in an Exhausted World”: Forma Conference 2025 Plenary Recording

This year’s Forma Annual Conference took place January 27–30, 2025. Our theme, "Come Away Together …

Continue Reading about “Faith in an Exhausted World”: Forma Conference 2025 Plenary Recording

Wooden dark brown cross on a light brown surface in a spotlight

Stations of the Cross and Seven Last Words Resources for All Ages

Two common liturgical traditions that churches of various denominations practice in Lent and Holy …

Continue Reading about Stations of the Cross and Seven Last Words Resources for All Ages

Footer

Keep in Touch

  • Email
  • Facebook

Building Faith

Lifelong Learning, Virginia Theological Seminary
3737 Seminary Rd.
Alexandria, VA 22304

Copyright © 2025 · Building Faith · A Ministry of Virginia Theological Seminary

Design by Blue+Pine Creative, Inc.

Subscribe to Building Faith

Get articles and resources by email

Privacy Policy

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website.
If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.

OkPrivacy policy