remember that you are dust

James Moore
2 min readFeb 9, 2023

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indeed, star dust

The movie Gladiator (2000) stars Russell Crowe as the general who became a slave. The slave who became a gladiator. The gladiator who defied an emperor. In the movie there are many great scenes, but there’s one in particular worthy of note. This is just before Russell Crowe, as Maximus, is about to fight in the arena. He is disgusted by the senseless brutality of the games. The late Oliver Reed, as Proximo, who manages a contingent of gladiators (the one including Maximus), is speaking to him about the Emperor Commodus.

Oliver Reed as Proximo

He says of Commodus (played by Joaquin Phoenix), “He knows too well how to manipulate the mob.” Maximus angrily responds, pointing toward the arena, “Marcus Aurelius had a dream that was Rome, Proximo. That is not it. That is not it!” Unfazed, Proximo shouts at Maximus as he storms away, “Marcus Aurelius is dead, Maximus. We mortals are but shadows and dust. Shadows and dust, Maximus!”

In the liturgy for Ash Wednesday (which will be on the 22nd), there are the powerful words which accompany the imposition of ashes, “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.” This is the prayer that precedes the imposition:

“Almighty God, you have created us out of the dust of the earth. May these ashes be for us a sign of our mortality and penitence, and a reminder that only by your gracious gift are we given everlasting life; through Jesus Christ our Savior.”

Proximo and Ash Wednesday, in describing humans as “dust,” seem to be saying the same thing. And at one level, both of them are. All of us will “shuffle off this mortal coil.” Still, with Proximo, there is a sense of resignation, a sense of hopelessness. Ash Wednesday agrees that yes, we are dust, but that is a statement filled with hope. That is so, because “only by [God’s] gracious gift” is this dust “given everlasting life.”

Still, even setting this wondrous reality aside for a moment, what’s wrong with being dust? Remember where we came from. We’re reminded of our origin, as beings of this planet, in the heart of a sun. Astronomy tells us that everything, everywhere, was created inside a star. We are creatures of star dust.

As we embark on our Lenten journey later this month, remember that we are star dust that has become aware of itself. We are star dust that is loved by its Creator.

“The Pillars of Creation,” a region of stars born in dust and gas. The left image is from the Hubble telescope in 1995; the right one is from the James Webb telescope in 2022.

Remember that you are dust!

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James Moore
James Moore

Written by James Moore

lover of snow, dog-walker, husband of a wonderful wife, with whom I also happen to join in ministry (list is not arranged in order of importance!)

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