To read the texts click on the texts: Dt 26:4-10; Rom 10:8-13; Lk 4:1-13
Lent is a forty day
period of fast and abstinence before Easter. It begins on Ash Wednesday and
ends on Holy Saturday. Sundays are not counted as part of these forty days
because on Sundays, we commemorate the Resurrection of the Lord.
While “Lent” means
the spring season, it also translates the Latin term, “quadragesima” which
means “forty days” or literally the “fortieth day”. The forty day period is
symbolic of the forty days that Jesus spent in the desert, a period mentioned
in all the synoptic gospels. “By the solemn forty days of Lent, the Church
unites herself each year to the mystery of Jesus in the desert.” (CCC 540).
By choosing the story
of the temptation of Jesus as the Gospel for the first Sunday in Lent, the
Church gives us an orientation of how each of us must approach Lent and life
itself. The three temptations of Jesus have been seen as corresponding to the
temptations of Israel. The temptations involved bread, testing the Lord, and
idolatry. Matthew followed this order in his narrative of the temptation scene.
However, Luke changed the order of the temptations. Luke placed the testing of
the Lord at the end of the temptations because, for Luke, testing the Lord on
the pinnacle of the Jerusalem Temple is the climax. The Temple is the place
where Luke begins his Gospel and the Temple is the place where Luke’s Gospel
will end.
In Luke, unlike in
Matthew and Mark, the temptations come after the period of forty days and thus,
highlight the fact that Jesus would have been vulnerable. He would have been
weakened by hunger. This is why the first temptation arises out of Jesus’
physical need. It is not like, in Matthew, a temptation to turn “stones” into
bread. In this temptation, Jesus is challenged to turn “this stone into a loaf
of bread”. While this may be understood as a temptation to perform a popular or
magical sign, it seems better to understand it as a temptation t use his power
for his own benefit. It is a temptation to be selfish and to satisfy one’s own
needs. It is also a temptation to concern oneself with the material alone as is
evident in the response of Jesus. There is much more that sustains the human
than mere physical satisfaction.
The second
temptation, to acquire power, authority, and dominion by worshipping Satan, is
really a temptation to take the easy way rather than the right way. It is a
temptation to compromise. Jesus’ response is that there is only one way to gain
authority, power, and dominion and that is by worshipping God, not things or
persons.
In the third and
final temptation, the devil quotes scripture since Jesus has used scripture to
overcome the previous two temptations. This temptation is to put God to the
test. Jesus’ response, with words taken from the Book of Deuteronomy, is clear
and unambiguous. God is to be worshipped and obeyed and not put to the test.
The final verse in Luke, which states that the Devil left him till an opportune
time, is Luke’s way of saying that Jesus continued to be tempted throughout his
life. This is evident in the numerous requests that continued to be made of him
for signs and wonders. It is evident even more, in the Garden of Gethsemane,
when he was sorely tempted to opt for a way other than the way of the Cross.
Jesus, like he did in the desert, overcame all temptations. The uniqueness of
Jesus is not merely that he was without sin, but that, even after being
tempted, he continued to remain sinless. Thus, the temptation must be
interpreted as the constant struggle or conflict between God’s reign and the
reign of Satan.
This struggle
continues today, even after the death and resurrection of Jesus. We continue to
be lured by numerous temptations. One of these is the temptation to be
successful at all costs, even if it means belittling others or riding roughshod
over them. Other temptations are to have more, rather than to be more, or to
choose the easy way rather than the right way, or to sit on the fence rather
than to take a stand, or to take the broad road rather than the road of pain
and sacrifice, or even to focus so much on the external that the internal is
forgotten.
How are we to
overcome these temptations? What must our response be in the face of such
temptations? We do not need to look far, or go to manuals on ethics, or even
listen to the counsel of the wise. We have an outstanding and practical example
of how to overcome temptations in Jesus and in the response. In a word, the
temptations are not so much about the temptations themselves, or even about
Satan and his attempts to entice, allure, and beguile us. The temptations are
about Jesus. They are about his fidelity and constancy to the mission. They are
about his focus and his commitment. They are about his pointed dedication to
God. We are offered today an example to follow and imitate. To be sure, the
story of the temptations does not give us ready made answers to all the
allurements and enticements we face everyday but, they do point us to the
response of Jesus, which at all times remained a response in which God’s will,
rather than his own, took primacy.
As we begin the grace
filled season of Lent, we are invited and challenged by Jesus’ response to
Satan. We are invited and challenged to make Jesus’ response our own.
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