By:  Christopher Beha [Mr. Beha is the author of the forthcoming book “Why
I Am Not an Atheist.”]
Published in: *The New York Times*
Date: February 11, 2026

Next week marks the beginning of Lent, the 40-day liturgical season leading
up to Holy Thursday. On Ash Wednesday, I’ll join millions throughout the
world in fasting, abstaining from meat and receiving ashes on my forehead,
along with the reminder that I am dust, and that to dust I will return.

Although a handful of Protestant denominations practice the imposition of
ashes, it is generally considered among the most distinctively Roman
Catholic traditions. Because it occurs in the middle of a seemingly random
winter week, not during a widely recognized holiday season, it tends to
sneak up on people outside the faith. It’s the time each year when they are
reminded exactly which of their daily acquaintances are practicing
Catholics, and it’s often assumed to be a sign of particular devotion.

In reality, however, it is one of the few Catholic rituals that is truly
open to anyone. Lapsed or wavering Catholics, non-Catholic Christians,
non-Christian theists, and even agnostics and atheists are all welcome. You
don’t even have to sit through Mass; many churches simply hand ashes out at
the door. The only thing asked of recipients is an awareness of their own
fallibility and a desire to repent for their mistakes.

The sense of my own imperfection and my need for help played a large role
in my return to the Catholic faith about a decade ago, which is one reason
the Lenten season means so much to me. To this end, I have taken since my
“reversion” to marking its beginning in another way, by reading T.S.
Eliot’s great poem “Ash Wednesday.”

“Because I do not hope to turn again,” the poem begins, insistently.
“Because I do not hope / Because I do not hope to turn.”

Eliot wrote “Ash Wednesday” around the time of his conversion to the
Anglican faith in 1927, and I read it at this time each year in part to
memorialize my own turnings, from devoted former altar boy to militant
atheist and, later, from atheist back to believer. I read it also as a
reminder that I might still turn again, however much I hope otherwise. As a
reminder to practice what I’ve come to call “skeptical belief.”

To many, this will sound like a bit of a paradox, since skepticism and
belief are understood to be in serious tension, if not outright opposition.
We are all skeptical at certain times about certain things, but when we
refer to someone more generally as a “skeptic,” we tend to mean that this
person bases beliefs about the world entirely on the rational examination
of objective evidence. More pointedly, we almost always mean that this
person does not believe in God. But this is not at all the term’s
historical meaning.

The Greek philosopher Pyrrho of Elis is often counted as the first
philosophical skeptic. His complete doubt about the possibility of any
human knowledge extended so far that, according to an ancient, possibly
apocryphal account, he refused even to accept the evidence of his senses
while walking down the street, “taking no precaution, but facing all risks
as they came, whether carts, precipices, dogs or what not.” (His less
skeptical friends followed behind to keep him out of trouble.)

Pyrrho’s first great modern disciple, the French essayist Michel de
Montaigne, would not even say that he knew nothing, which seemed to express
too much certainty. He preferred to put the matter as a question: “What do
I know?” Yet Montaigne’s essays contain countless expressions of Christian
piety. Precisely because we can’t have knowledge about even the most basic
points, he argued, we must inevitably take certain things on faith — at
least, if we don’t have friends kind enough to spend their lives guiding us
around dogs and carts.

It’s possible to understand the entire modern philosophical tradition as an
effort to grapple with the extreme skepticism that Montaigne reintroduced
to Western culture without falling, as Montaigne did, back on faith. Four
hundred and fifty years later, that project has brought us to a strange
point.

Seemingly the worst thing a person can be in our era is “credulous.” We
understand ourselves as surrounded on all sides by cons and grifts, and we
take great pride in seeing through them all. On the other hand, skepticism
as practiced by Pyrrho and Montaigne seems almost entirely absent from our
culture. The kind of skepticism we practice today involves seeing through
all the pseudo truths around us to the actual truths they attempt to
conceal. The dominant intellectual mode is not unknowing but knowingness.
We all have our one great truth, which allows us to pierce the pretensions
of others.

In the face of this I attempt — with varying degrees of success at varying
times — to take a page from Montaigne’s book and embrace skeptical belief.
I’m well aware that religion has often served as precisely that “one great
truth” that people are punished for refusing to accept. But it has also
served as an expression of the fundamental mystery at the heart of reality
and the radical limitations of human understanding. It is a way of living
with skepticism.

What does this mean in practice? Embracing skeptical belief does not mean
believing things without “really” believing them. It means understanding
your beliefs as limited, contingent and fallible, recognizing that they
can’t be proven correct, that someone else’s refusal to come around to them
does not indicate stupidity or obstinacy or bad faith.

Similarly, a skeptical believer recognizes doubt as an essential component
of belief, rather than its opposite. To a skeptical believer, the great
mark of sincerity is the extent to which you attempt to live out your
beliefs in your own life despite your own doubts, not the extent to which
you silence those doubts or the doubts of others.

We are all familiar with the phenomenon of the “zeal of the convert,” the
tendency of those whose minds have been changed to embrace their new
position with particular ferocity. I had more than my share of it when I
became an atheist, and I found it frankly a bit embarrassing to tell some
of the people to whom I’d most stridently expressed my new opinions that I
had given them up in turn.

I’d like to think that I now have some of the humility of the re-converted.
Like Eliot, I do not hope to turn again, but I try to imagine the
conversations that would result if I did. And I try to apply what the great
skeptic David Hume called a “tincture of Pyrrhonism” to even my most
precious certainties.

That doesn’t mean that I’ve given up arguing on behalf of my beliefs. One
of the reasons I love Ash Wednesday is that for one day these beliefs are
conspicuous to others without my having to say a word. I think I’m a better
person on this day on account of that fact.

To push ahead of someone on the train, to refuse a dollar to the woman
selling candy with a baby on her back, to make a snarky remark at the
register about my misunderstood coffee order, all while I have ashes on my
head, would announce to anyone who cared to notice the disjunction between
my supposed beliefs and my life in the world.

What I try instead to do on this day is simply meet each choice I face with
my fallible and limited beliefs, and respond to that choice in the way
those beliefs actually commend. Then I try, on the next day and the next,
to imagine I still have that mark on me, that I am constantly being called
to live up to the beliefs I claim to hold, to imagine that this is the best
case I can ever make for them. As a skeptic, I’ve come to think this is the
only way that beliefs can ever really be proven.

But then, I could be wrong.
Christopher Beha is a memoirist and novelist.

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