Sunday, February 26, 2023

 FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT

(Genesis 2:7-9.3:1-7; Romans 5:12-19; Matthew 4:1-11)

Look at the people at mass with you. Most of them probably have gray hair, at least at their roots. In large numbers both young people and adults have stopped attending Mass. Not a few of these consider those who go to church superstitious. And if churchgoers express doubts about abortion, gay marriage, or reparations for slavery, they may consider them chauvinists and racists as well.

Despite the world's suspicion, we know that being a practicing Catholic Christian does not hurt us. On the contrary, it is our salvation and the salvation of the world from perverse ideologies like communism or hedonism. But are we Christians worthy of the name? That is, are we true sons and daughters of God? We can prove ourselves so together with Jesus in the gospel today. Let us not doubt that the devil tempts us every day as he tempts Jesus here.

The devil never offers sin as something destructive. Rather, he always presents us with something bad under a semblance of good. In the first reading, the serpent offers the woman the forbidden fruit, but he emphasizes that eating it will make her wise. Jesus is very hungry when the devil dares him to change the stones into bread. In the same way he entices us to satisfy our craving for food, drink, and sexual pleasure. Jesus rejects the devil's offer because he gives more importance to attending to the word of God the Father than to eating. Following him, we must remember the need for moderation in matters of appetite.

The devil not only tempts our physical needs but also our deepest yearnings. When in desperation, every human calls on God to save her. In situations that require extreme personal sacrifice, we Christians hope that He will protect us. A woman remembers how she felt empty and lost when she received news that her two brothers had been in a car accident. The crash killed one and seriously injured the other. She did not have inner peace until she received the counsel that God allows these disorders to produce something better. In the second temptation the devil tempts Jesus to kill himself so that he might experience the love of God the Father. But Jesus knows that the love of the Father is so infinitely enduring that He will always take care of him.

Finally, the demon tempts Jesus with power. He says that he will grant him sovereignty over the world in exchange for a simple act of worship. But Jesus knows that power sought for its own sake only corrupts. He does not hesitate to drive the demon out of his presence. We are not that perceptive. Power attracts us a lot. We want to force tribute, respect, even love from other people. This is why domestic violence continues to tear so many families apart. We must resolve that whatever power we have or seek will be used for the betterment of others, never to harm them.

In the Arizona desert around the city of Yuma, the US Army has what is called a “proving ground.” The heat and aridity make the conditions brutal, at least during the summer. Troops undergoing training are proven combat ready. Lent provides us with a kind of proving ground. It prepares us to resist the temptations of the devil. Equally important, it enables us to contribute to the salvation of the world. In these forty days of self-surrender to God, we prove ourselves as his true daughters and sons.

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