Wednesday Wisdom – First Week of Lent

As we journey through the first week of Lent, we are drawn into the wilderness with Jesus Christ. The wilderness is not simply a barren place; it is a place of stripping back, of honesty, of encounter. It is where distractions fade and where we come face to face with what truly shapes our hearts.

In the Gospel of Matthew 4:1–11, Jesus is tempted in the desert. Hungry, tired, and alone, he is invited to choose comfort, power, and control. Yet each time, he responds not with argument or force, but with steady trust in God’s word. His strength is rooted not in spectacle, but in faithfulness.

Lent invites us into our own wilderness spaces. These may not be sandy deserts, but they can feel just as stark — moments of uncertainty, challenge, self-examination, or quiet longing. Rather than rushing through them, we are encouraged to stay, to listen, and to allow God to meet us there.

This week, reflect gently:

  • Where am I being tempted to take the easy path instead of the faithful one?
  • What distractions are crowding out prayer, stillness, or compassion?
  • How might God be forming resilience and trust in me through this season?

The wilderness is not the end of the story. It is preparation. It is strengthening. It is clarity. Lent reminds us that when we let go of what we cling to, we discover the One who holds us fast.

May this Wednesday bring courage for the wilderness and wisdom for the journey.

Week 1 — Into the Wilderness

Scripture: Mark 1:9–13

The Baptism of Jesus
9 In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. 10 And just as he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove upon him. 11 And a voice came from the heavens, “You are my Son, the Beloved;[a] with you I am well pleased.”

The Testing of Jesus
12 And the Spirit immediately drove him out into the wilderness. 13 He was in the wilderness forty days, tested by Satan, and he was with the wild beasts, and the angels waited on him.

Prayer:
Lord Jesus, who entered the wilderness in obedience and trust, lead us through our own barren places. Quiet our hearts, steady our steps, and help us listen for Your voice. Amen.

Reflection:
Lent begins not with action but with emptiness. Jesus is driven into the wilderness—away from noise, away from certainty, away from comfort. Yet it is there that identity is clarified: You are my beloved. Our own wilderness moments can feel like absence, but they are often the spaces where God’s voice becomes clearest. Lent invites us to step back, slow down, and rediscover who we are in God’s sight.

Ash Wednesday Reflection

Reading – Psalm 51:10–12 (NIV)

Create in me a pure heart, O God,
and renew a steadfast spirit within me.
Do not cast me from your presence
or take your Holy Spirit from me.
Restore to me the joy of your salvation
and grant me a willing spirit, to sustain me.


Reflection

Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent—a season of reflection, repentance, and renewal. In many Christian traditions, ashes are placed on the forehead as a sign of humility and mortality. In the Presbyterian Church, we may not use ashes in worship, but we still enter into the same spirit of the day: a quiet honesty before God.

Psalm 51 gives us language for that honesty. It is not a psalm of despair but of deep trust. David comes before God not with excuses, not with self-justification, but with a heart laid bare. And in that vulnerability, he discovers something astonishing: God meets him with mercy.

Lent is not about self-punishment. It is not about proving our worth. It is about clearing away the noise so we can hear God again. It is about recognising the places where we have drifted, and gently turning back. It is about remembering that we are human—finite, fragile, imperfect—and yet deeply loved.

At Bellshill Central, we know that faith is lived in the real world: in the pressures of work, the demands of family life, the joys and challenges of community, the quiet moments when we wonder if we’re doing enough. Ash Wednesday invites us to bring all of that to God without pretending.

“Create in me a pure heart… renew a steadfast spirit…”
These are not words of defeat. They are words of hope.
They remind us that God is not finished with us.
They remind us that renewal is possible.
They remind us that grace is always the first word and the last.

As we begin this Lenten journey, may we walk it not with heaviness but with expectation—trusting that God will shape us, guide us, and restore us.


Prayer

Holy and gracious God,
as we enter this season of Lent,
we come to you with open hearts.
We confess the ways we fall short—
in our actions, our words, and our silence.
Yet we trust in your mercy,
your patience, and your unfailing love.

Create in us clean hearts,
renew our spirits,
and draw us closer to you.

In our church family here at Bellshill Central,
strengthen our fellowship,
deepen our compassion,
and guide us in the way of Christ.

May this season be one of growth,
of honesty,
and of renewed hope.

In Jesus’ name,
Amen.

Shrove Tuesday Reflection

Reading – Joel 2:12–13 (NIV)

“Even now,” declares the Lord, “return to me with all your heart,
with fasting and weeping and mourning.”
Rend your heart and not your garments.
Return to the Lord your God, for he is gracious and compassionate,
slow to anger and abounding in love.

Reflection

Shrove Tuesday sits in that quiet space between ordinary time and the long, reflective road of Lent. Traditionally a day for using up rich ingredients before the fast, it has always carried a deeper meaning: a moment to pause, to take stock, and to be honest with ourselves before God.

The word shrove comes from “to shrive”—to confess, to be absolved, to be set right again. It’s not about guilt or gloom; it’s about clearing the clutter so grace has room to breathe.

Joel’s words speak straight into that moment. “Return to me with all your heart.” Not half-heartedly. Not out of duty. Not with outward show. God asks for something far more real: a heart that is willing to turn, to soften, to begin again.

At Bellshill Central, we know that faith is lived in the everyday—between school runs, work shifts, caring responsibilities, choir rehearsals, and community commitments. Shrove Tuesday invites us to bring all of that to God. The hurried bits. The weary bits. The hopeful bits. The bits we’d rather hide.

And the promise is simple and beautiful:
God meets us with compassion.
God welcomes us with patience.
God surrounds us with love that does not run out.

As we step into Lent, we don’t do so to prove ourselves. We do it to make space—space for prayer, for kindness, for reflection, for God’s quiet voice. Shrove Tuesday is the doorway. Lent is the journey. Easter is the destination.

May this be a season where our hearts are renewed, our burdens lightened, and our hope restored.

Prayer

Gracious and loving God,
as we stand on the threshold of Lent,
help us to pause and breathe in your presence.
Clear away the noise that distracts us
and the worries that weigh us down.

Turn our hearts toward you—
not in fear, but in trust;
not in duty, but in love.

Where we need healing, bring your gentleness.
Where we need courage, bring your strength.
Where we need forgiveness, bring your mercy.

Bless our church family here in Bellshill Central.
Guide us through this season with honesty, humility,
and a renewed sense of your grace at work among us.

In Jesus’ name,
Amen.