
"You are dust, and to dust you shall return" (Genesis 3:19).
These words, whispered at the dawn of Scripture, are neither a condemnation nor a sadness. They are a reminder. Man is formed from the earth, and yet he carries within him the Breath. Between dust and Spirit, our entire destiny unfolds.
In the Gospel, when Christ is led into the desert to be tempted, he replies: "Man shall not live by bread alone" (Gospel according to Matthew 4:4). The desert then becomes the place of truth: matter nourishes the body, but the soul is nourished by the Word, silence, and inner faithfulness.
From a Martinist perspective, physical life is not to be rejected. The material world is our field of experience, the workshop where the Man of Desire learns, falls, rises again, and refines his consciousness. It is here, in the thick of ordinary days, that the transition to the ministry of the Man-Spirit can take place. Matter is a school, not a prison.
Ash Wednesday offers a delicate image of this. The blessed branches of the previous year are consumed. The boxwood is reduced to ashes, the form disappears. But the flame rises. So it is with us: what is perishable returns to dust, but the living principle, the inner spark, is not extinguished. Fire reminds us that transformation is at the heart of the initiatory path.
This dynamic of purification is not limited to Christian tradition. The Celtic festival of Imbolc, a festival of purification, already marked the time when the earth, washed by melting snow and new rains, was preparing to be reborn. Later becoming Candlemas, it retains this luminous symbolism: purification and the offering of light. Like the earth, lightened by winter, human beings were invited to rid themselves, through ritual sprinkling or immersion, of whatever weighed them down or hindered their inner momentum.
Water washes, fire transforms: two complementary movements of the same mystery.
The forty days of Lent are not simply a liturgical calendar. Forty evokes the forty years of the Hebrew people in the desert, a journey of trial and learning. The number four, representing the material world, multiplied by ten, the number of fulfillments, suggests a complete journey through our earthly condition. It is a pedagogy of time.
Fasting—for "man does not live by bread alone"—can become a conscious act of rebalancing. Intensified prayer and study refine our discernment. Service and helping others transform personal energy into offering. Each person, according to their own path and tradition, can make this period a time of elevation.
Lent does not belong exclusively to the Christian churches; it is a universal archetype of stripping away and rebirth. Under the sign of Pisces, symbol of the sacrifice of individuality and the call to merge with the Divine, we are invited to transcend the ego in order to rediscover unity.
Let us remember, sisters and brothers: we are not only bodies destined for dust, but souls called to the Light. May these forty days be for each of us an inner journey, gentle yet steadfast, toward this profound reality that never fades.
"As above, so below." May this path leading from the cold winter to the resurrection of lush nature at Easter echo our own inner journey toward Reintegration.
