Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Ash Wednesday, Year A (2026)

Joel 2: 1–2, 12–17 

Psalm 51: 1–17 

II Corinthians 5: 20b – 6:10 

Matthew 6: 1–6, 16–21


This is the written version of the homily given at Flohr’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELCA) in McKnightstown, Pennsylvania on Wednesday, February 18, 2026 by Fr. Gene Tucker, Interim Pastor.

 

“INTEGRATION & INTEGRITY”

(Homily text: Matthew 6: 1–6, 16–21)

“If you’re going to come and serve here, your insides must match your outsides.” So said my first Bishop.

What he was getting at is the business of integrity.

Sometimes, we can see integrity in a person when they act the same way when no one can see what they are doing, as when they act when others can see what they’re doing. Their actions, done in private or in secret, match their actions in public, to put it another way. The reverse is also true.

A focus of much of our Lord’s ministry had to do with the business of integrity, of matching a person’s outward actions with an inner transformation of the heart and the mind, of allowing the outward actions and observances of God’s ordinances to be fully integrated into the inner heart and mind.

In the Sermon on the Mount, from which today’s Gospel reading is taken, Jesus takes on the obvious disconnect between outward appearance and inner disposition and transformation.

It would be easy to think that the Lord’s comments, heard by the crowd that had gathered around to hear His thoughts, were actually aimed at the scribes and the Pharisees, for in Matthew’s Gospel account, those two groups are mentioned, time and again.

“Beware of practicing your righteousness before other people, in order to be seen by them,” the Lord says.

Sounds very much like the behaviors of the scribes and the Pharisees, whom the Lord described as being “white-washed tombs”,[1] those who look good on the outside, but are, in actuality, full of dead men’s bones inside.

Later on in his Gospel account, Matthew records a series of indictments against the scribes and the Pharisees. It’s worth reading these harsh statements, each of which begins with “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees…”[2]

What, then, was the problem with the scribes and the Pharisees?

Simply this: They were going through all the motions, observing all the practices that the Law of Moses required, attending worship in the Temple, and attending gatherings in the synagogues where the Law and the Prophets were read each Sabbath day.

However, we get the impression that they had walled off part of themselves to the truths of God, those truths that require “mercy, not sacrifice”.[3]

Here we come to the important part of the purpose of all those outward actions, those requirements of the Law of Moses: Those things that God’s people were required to do were meant to sink into their innermost selves, into their hearts and minds.  Put another way, the outward actions were meant to influence the inner heart and mind.

That’s what the scribes and Pharisees failed to do. It’s as if they had set aside a part of themselves, and were telling God “This part of me is off-limits to you and to your truths”.

Jesus’ warning to the scribes and the Pharisees is also a warning to us.

It’d be easy to simply “go through the motions” of living a Christian life, of regular attendance at worship, of an outward observance of the faith.

But we can – each of us – wall off a part of ourselves to God’s love, God’s truth and God’s deep desire to enter into an intense, inner relationship of love and renewal. For whatever reason, God gave us the freedom to do that.

The Lord’s warning is especially important to those Christians who maintain a liturgical worship heritage, for it’d be easy to concentrate on things like music, the liturgical actions that happen during a Eucharistic celebration, or a building’s beauty. However, those things are all meant to turn our focus to God, to God’s truths and to God’s demand for inner transformation of heart and mind. Each of these aspects of liturgical worship are meant to direct us to God’s majesty, power and love.

This Lenten season, the call comes to us, to each of us, to step back, try to see ourselves as God sees us, and then to take stock of the state of how well and how fully we’ve integrated godly values into the very fiber of our being. Such a journey won’t be easy, and it’s a certainty that we’ll need the help of the Holy Spirit to walk a productive Lenten journey as we make our way to Good Friday, and then to Easter and to new life.

AMEN.



[1]   Matthew 23:27

[2]   Matthew 23: 1-31

[3]  Jesus quotes Hosea 6:6, as Matthew records His comment in Matthew 9:13.