FIRST SUNDAY
OF LENT C 2022
We enter into another Lenten season. We were marked with ashes this past Wednesday
as Lent formally began. These ashes acknowledge that we all belong to the order
of penitents. We all confess that we are
sinners, and we stand in need of the Lord’s healing forgiveness. The light of Christ that is within us has
been dimmed by the darkness of our sin.
We acknowledge this reality with these ashes. We were given the mantra to: Repent and believe in the Gospel.
God led the
people of Israel into the desert, to forge them into a new people. The Spirit led Jesus into the desert to
clarify the meaning of his Messiahship.
The Spirit leads us into the desert of Lent to reflect on how we have
not always resisted temptation and have failed to love. In the desert we seek mercy and
forgiveness. Lent is God’s gift to us to
become more aware that we are God’s redeemed and forgiven people.
In the
Lenten season, we seek to enter the same space as Jesus. We are led by the Holy Spirit into the desert
to experience fasting and self-denial and to be tempted and to be tested by the
devil. As disciples of the Lord Jesus,
we are tested; we are tried during the Lenten season to gauge our commitment of
turning away from sin and being faithful to the Gospel. How do we deal with the Lenten call to
embrace spiritual disciplines? What
fasting are we willing to embrace in the Lenten season? What spiritual discipline of prayer can we
make a commitment to? What almsgiving,
what are willing to tithe in the service of others?
The story of
Jesus’ temptations reveals to us the deepest thing about him: he had total trust in his heavenly
Father. Jesus turned to the Word of God
in the face of temptation and expressed his trust, his obedience to God’s plan
for him.
This Lent,
into which desert are you being led into by the Spirit?
My hope for myself and for you is that you will encounter the Lord in prayer this Lenten season. May this encounter fill you with joy and inner peace. Make a decision, for example, to pray the Stations of the Cross on the Friday Evenings of Lent with other parishioners; experience the merciful love of Jesus in the Sacrament of Reconciliation on Saturday afternoon or on our parish Lenten day of prayer on April 6 or by asking one or our priests at any time; and celebrate the Eucharist more frequently during Lent.
May our
Lenten prayer further motivate ourselves to share the merciful love of Jesus
with others. Participate in one of the
corporal works of mercy: Feed the
hungry, clothe the naked, shelter the homeless.
Make a difference in the lives of people in need.
For example,
the rationale behind your generosity to operation rice bowl is that our Lenten
sacrifices become the source of hope and change for some of our poorest
brothers and sisters around the world.
May our Lenten spiritual disciplines lead us to share what we have with
those who are hungry and in need of our generosity.
Jesus
finding himself in the desert being tempted by the devil was not the result of
bad luck or being at the wrong place at the wrong time. Rather, this was by divine design. Jesus was led by the Spirit into the desert.
Now this
isn’t always true for us. Sometimes we
can find ourselves in the desert of disappointment or failure, not led by the
Spirit of God’s love but rather they are the result of bad choices we have
made. Our desire for pleasure, power, or
greed can sometimes get the best of us and lead us into the wilderness.
But with
Jesus, he is being led by the Spirit of God’s love into the desert to be
tempted by the devil to use his power in ways that are not in God’s plan. The devil was tempting Jesus to become the
Messiah without the cross. The devil was
tempting Jesus to take the short cut to achieve his power as the Messiah.
Jesus was
led by the Spirit into the desert to be humbled, to be tested and tempted, to
struggle with the forces of evil and thereby fully trust in God’s plan for His
life.
As with our
life being turned upside by this pandemic, as you have grieved the loss of
someone you dearly love, as you have dealt with illness in your life and the in
the life of a dear family member, as you have been hurt and your confidence has
been betrayed, as you struggle with the temptation of pornography, as you have
had to deal with more than your fair share of challenges, as we witness the
horrific Russian invasion into Ukraine, can you see these experiences as being
led by the Spirit into the desert to be tempted by the devil. Can these life wrenching experiences be
example of how you are being led by the Spirit into the desert?
The Stations
of the Cross describe the stages of the suffering and death of Jesus. As we experience the stations of the cross of
illness, of death, of brokenness in our own stories, may we too get the help of
Simon of Cyrene and be strengthened by the love of Mary our mother. As for Jesus, our own stations of the cross
are our way of discipleship.
Yes, there are demons; there is
sinfulness in our lives that we seek to turn away from. Yes, we encounter Satan in the desert of our
inner wilderness. But that is not the
end of our Lenten journey. The real
purpose of our Lenten spiritual disciplines is that we are to encounter God in
the desert of Lent. May we allow
ourselves to believe in His love.
The Lenten
desert is about wrestling with the demons of our life; but the Lenten season is
also about conversion; it is our retreat in which we encounter God with blessed
and grateful hearts. We embrace the
spiritual disciplines of lent – we embrace prayer, fasting, almsgiving – so
that we are clearly place God as first in our lives.
May we
encounter the God who loves us in our Lenten journey.
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