Tomorrow is Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent. If you’re Christian, this might be a big deal for you. But sometimes schedules are schedules, and getting to a church to have an an ash cross places on your forehead will be impossible. Fear not—church will come to you.

The Episcopal Diocese of Washington has announced that some 20 churches will be out at Metro stations and on street corners tomorrow for the annual “Ashes to Go” program, where they will offer ash crosses to passers-by who may not have time to head to church:

Each year, Christians gather for Ash Wednesday services to receive an ash cross on their foreheads, a sign of penitence and humility that sets the tone for the Lenten season. The administering of ashes in public spaces on Ash Wednesday has become a church-wide movement in the Episcopal Church, when priests take this historic tradition outside of church buildings to train stations, Metro stops, and street corners, where interested passers-by are marked with the sign of the cross-a reminder of the temporal nature of life.

“I believe that the Holy Spirit is calling all of us out of our comfort zones, and I’m eager to engage in spiritual conversations with people outside the church,” said Bishop Budde. “May all whom we encounter be blessed with an awareness of God’s love and the fleeting beauty of life.”

Church representatives will be located at Metro stations at Union Station, Capitol South, Benning Road, and Foggy Bottom, as well as at the corner of Baltimore Avenue and College Avenue in College Park, Md. and the Germantown MARC Station.