‘Ashes To Go’ Available On Ash Wednesday In Cantonment

February 17, 2026

Need to do Ash Wednesday in a hurry? Several churches are offering outdoor imposition of ashes to help people start Lent on Wednesday, without even leaving their cars.

St. Monica’s Episcopal Church Rev. Deacon Rachel Iversen says they will be set up at Cantonment Ace Hardware at 1560 Highway 29. The church team will be there from 7 a.m. until 9 p.m., offering ashes to observe Ash Wednesday, the start of Lent.

“This is for people on their way to work – it’s a window of opportunity,” Iversen said. “People can pull up, we’ll have a guided meditation, a prayer on a bulletin. They can read the prayer, prepare mentally and spiritually. If they want to pray, we’ll pray with them.”

The drive-through concept welcomes people who have never seen Ash Wednesday before. They do not have to be churchgoers, Iversen said. “There’s no stipulation – wherever you are in your spiritual journey,” she said. “If they’re curious, they can experience the ashes. It’s a spiritual experience. If people want a time of prayer, repentance and reflecting on their own mortality, we want to let them know that the call to turn and focus on God is present anywhere.”

“We make a shape of the cross with ashes on the forehead and say what the ancients said, ‘Remember that you are dust and to dust you shall return.’ It is a wonderful reminder of our mortality, but the grace of it all too.”

Iversen said they will hand out sheets with answers to often-asked questions about Ash Wednesday, such as “Do I have to wear the ashes all day?” “Only if you want to,” Iversen said. The ashes are worn as a sign of penitence. The church is called to take the church out to the streets. “We are going to dress like clergy, so people know we are fulfilling that role,” Iversen said. “If I were out there in blue jeans, people wouldn’t know we were ministers.”

Ash Wednesday marks the start of the 40-day penitential period of Lent, leading up to the celebration of Easter, which will be observed April 5 in most churches.

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