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Wednesday, February 18, 2026 · Past event
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Ash Wednesday 2026
Event overview
First day of Lent in Western Christianity; opens the 40-day fasting period leading to Easter.
Ash Wednesday 2026, falling on Wednesday 18 February 2026 in the Western Christian liturgical calendar. Ash Wednesday is the first day of Lent, the 40-day penitential season that prepares the faithful for Easter, observed by Roman Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, Methodist, Reformed and many other Western Christian traditions. The day is marked by fasting, abstinence and the imposition of ashes on the forehead — a public sign of repentance and human mortality.
Ash Wednesday derives its name from the public imposition of ashes — usually made by burning the previous year's blessed Palm Sunday palms — accompanied by the formula "Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return" (Genesis 3:19) or "Repent and believe in the Gospel" (Mark 1:15). The custom is documented in early medieval Western liturgies and was made the universal beginning of Lent by Pope Urban II at the Council of Benevento in 1091, fixing the season at 40 days excluding Sundays, recalling Christ's 40-day fast in the wilderness (Matthew 4:1–11).
The Lenten season is one of the four "great seasons" of the Western liturgical year (alongside Advent, Christmastide and Eastertide). Roman Catholic faithful are bound to fast (one full meal plus two collations) and abstain from meat on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday under the Code of Canon Law. Many other Western traditions observe parallel disciplines. The Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic churches observe a different start — Clean Monday, two days earlier — and a different rule of fasting through the Great Fast that extends to Holy Saturday.
The principal liturgical action on Ash Wednesday is the Mass or service of the Word with the imposition of ashes, traditionally celebrated in the morning and again in the evening to accommodate working faithful. The ashes — sacramentals rather than sacraments — are made by burning palms blessed on the previous Palm Sunday and mixing them with holy water or chrism oil. Pastors trace the ashes on the forehead in the form of a cross. Roman Catholics begin the Lenten "three pillars" of prayer, fasting and almsgiving; many Christians take on a personal Lenten observance such as fasting from social media, additional prayer, daily Mass attendance, the Stations of the Cross on Fridays, or service to the poor. The Anglican Communion's Book of Common Prayer prescribes the proper psalms and the litany on Ash Wednesday. In Hispanic and Filipino communities, large open-air services bring tens of thousands to receive ashes; the Vatican's papal Mass at Santa Sabina on the Aventine in Rome is broadcast worldwide.
The Vatican publishes the papal Ash Wednesday liturgy at vatican.va and via Vatican News, with EWTN and Catholic News Agency carrying English-language coverage. National episcopal conferences — USCCB (US), CBCEW (England and Wales), CCCB (Canada), CBCI (India), ACBC (Australia) — publish pastoral letters and Lenten resources. The Anglican Communion office, the Lutheran World Federation, the Methodist Church and the World Communion of Reformed Churches each publish parallel resources for their traditions. Local parishes publish Mass and service times on their websites and parish bulletins.
Ash Wednesday opens a Lent that culminates in Good Friday 2027 (in 2026 the dates are tightly clustered) and Easter 2027 for the next cycle. The wider Christian liturgical calendar is mapped at the Christian festival hub. Cross-tradition fasting parallels include Ramadan 2027 on the Islamic calendar and Yom Kippur 2026 on the Jewish calendar.
When is Ash Wednesday in 2026? Wednesday 18 February 2026 in the Western Christian calendar; Eastern Orthodox observe Clean Monday on 16 February 2026. Where is Ash Wednesday observed? Globally across Roman Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, Methodist, Reformed and other Western Christian communities; in roughly 100 countries with a Christian population. Why does Ash Wednesday matter? It is the first day of Lent — the 40-day Christian penitential season preparing for Easter — and the day on which ashes are imposed as a sign of repentance and mortality. Is fasting required? In the Roman Catholic Church, faithful aged 18 to 59 are bound to fast (one full meal) and those aged 14 and over to abstain from meat; other traditions have similar but distinct disciplines.
Source
https://www.usccb.org/Related countdowns
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