Lent is a season of honest preparation. From Ash Wednesday to Easter, believers intentionally practice fasting, simplicity, and repentance, not to earn God’s favor, but to stop pretending we don’t need His mercy. Lent slows us down long enough to face what we often avoid: the condition of the human heart apart from God. The shape of Lent is meant to mirror the pattern we see throughout Scripture: before God heals, He exposes; before He restores, He brings us to truth; before we celebrate resurrection, we admit the reality of death in us. If we skip that honesty, we don’t truly understand what we’re asking God to save us from. So today is not about the “steps” of change yet. Today is about naming the problem—our depravity—so we will stop managing symptoms and begin seeking the only cure.
David models this posture of truth-telling:
“Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin my mother conceived me. Behold, You desire truth in the inward parts, And in the hidden part You will make me to know wisdom. Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. Make me hear joy and gladness, that the bones You have broken may rejoice” Psalm 51:5–8 (NKJV). David does not treat sin as a minor mistake or a surface issue. He speaks of it as something woven into him—deep, inward, present from the beginning. And notice the tenderness inside his confession: God doesn’t merely demand external behavior; He “desire[s] truth in the inward parts.” Lent calls us to that same inward truth—because what we refuse to confess, we will never truly repent of.
Paul speaks the same diagnosis when describing life before Christ:
“Among whom also we all once conducted ourselves in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, just as the others” Ephesians 2:3 (NKJV). This is not simply “bad habits.” It’s nature. Scripture confronts us with the uncomfortable reality that sin is not only what we do; it is what we are apart from divine intervention. Lent begins here because spiritual renewal cannot be built on self-flattery.
And Scripture ties this condition to a universal human source:
“Therefore, just as through one man sin entered the world, and death through sin, and thus death spread to all men, because all sinned” Romans 5:12 (NKJV). Sin is not an isolated personal glitch; it is a shared human catastrophe. Death spreads because sin spreads. David’s confession is not unique to David; it is the story of humanity. “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” Romans 3:23 (NKJV). Lent cuts through the instinct to compare ourselves to others. “All” means none of us stands outside the need for repentance. The ash on the forehead is a sermon without words: we are dust, and we cannot rescue ourselves.
Even when we want to do right, Scripture exposes the war inside us:
“For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells; for to will is present with me, but how to perform what is good I do not find. For the good that I will to do, I do not do; but the evil I will not to do, that I practice. Now if I do what I will not to do, it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells in me” Romans 7:18–20 (NKJV). This is the misery of depravity: not only guilt for wrong actions, but helplessness to consistently produce what is truly good. Paul’s words dismantle the fantasy that we can fix ourselves by stronger willpower, better intentions, or improved routines.
And Jesus names the root distinction underneath it all:
“That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit” John 3:6 (NKJV). Natural birth produces what is natural, and the flesh cannot generate spiritual life. Lent begins with this sober truth: if our deepest problem is inward and inherited, then our deepest need is not mere improvement, but transformation that must come from God.
Ash Wednesday Closing Thoughts
Today, Lent asks you to stop negotiating with sin and start agreeing with God about it. Repentance begins when excuses end. Not because God is cruel, but because He is committed to truth in the inward parts, and truth is the doorway to cleansing, renewal, and joy. You don’t confess depravity to drown in shame. We confess our depravity, so we stop trusting ourselves and start seeking mercy with clarity. The cure will come into focus as we continue, but tonight the first step is this: admit what is true.
Personal reflection questions
1. When you think about sin, do you treat it mainly as occasional “mistakes,” or as an inward condition that shapes your desires and choices?
2. Where are you most tempted to manage appearances instead of pursuing “truth in the inward parts”?
3. What excuses, justifications, or comparisons (“at least I’m not like…”) do you use to soften the seriousness of sin?
4. In what areas do you relate most to Romans 7:18–20—wanting good, but repeatedly practicing what you hate?
5. If you truly believed you were “by nature” spiritually helpless apart from God (Ephesians 2:3; John 3:6), what would change about the way you pray, confess, and depend on Him?
6. What is one honest sentence of confession you can speak to God tonight—without polishing it, defending it, or minimizing it?
7. David asked, “Purge me…wash me…make me hear joy and gladness.” Which part of that request do you most need to become your own—and why?
We cannot repent seriously if we don’t diagnose ourselves honestly. Scripture teaches that sin is universal, inward, and stronger than mere intention, so Lent begins with realism rather than optimism. Ash Wednesday calls us to face the nature of our full of sin flesh, the reach of Adam’s fall, and the war within our own hearts. The point is not despair; it is clarity. When the problem is finally named, the need for grace becomes undeniable.