Deuteronomy 26: 4-10
Romans 10: 8-13
Luke 4: 1-13
Note: The Catholic parishes of Beverly, MA,
are part of the first phase of reorganizing the parishes of the Archdiocese of
Boston into 2 to 3 parish collaboratives, under one pastor and pastoral team.
Today’s Gospel reading continues
the story after the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist. Jesus has experienced the Holy Spirit coming
upon Him, has heard the Father confirming that he is the Son of God. He must have been on a spiritual high; he is
“the man.” Now we see the Spirit leading
him into the desolation that is the desert.
We are told that Jesus fasted for forty days, and was “hungry.” Now, those of us who are dieters, or failed
dieters, we may think we know what it means to be hungry, but that is nothing
compared to the hunger Jesus must have experienced, and what the effects it
must have been to his body. This
combination of hunger and surviving the desert, must have definitely taken him
out of his comfort zone. It is then that
the devil challenges Jesus, tempts Jesus.
He first tempts Jesus to change a stone into bread. Then he tries to have Jesus doubt his own
power as the Messiah, by accepting power from the devil, at the price of worshiping
him, rather than the Father. Finally,
the devil tries to have Jesus get the Father to confirm that He is the Son, by
saving him from a fall. All these
actions, changing stone into bread, accepting power from another, seeking the
Father’s reaffirmation; these are all self-centered actions. And Jesus came not for himself but for
others.
So Jesus drew on the divine power
that was in him all the time, which was and is at the center of his being. The Evangelist Luke expresses this power by
having Jesus quote the Hebrew Scriptures.
It is the power of the Word of God that will drive the devil away.
Now, all of us experience
temptation at different times, and in different ways. We are tempted to reach for that cookie on
the plate, even when our mother says not to.
We are tempted to reach for the game boy, rather than doing our
homework. We are tempted to join in the
gossip about a coworker, rather than defend him or her. And sometimes we are tempted to give in to
despair, because life has gotten so hard, so dark. In moments of temptation, great or small, we
all need to turn to Him who has experienced it himself, who knows what we are
going through. If we open ours hearts to
Him, if we let His word take hold of us, have faith in Him, we will ignore the
temptation, have hope and not be put to shame.
Lent is a time when the Church
challenges us; through fasting, increased prayer, and almsgiving, giving of
ourselves for others; to leave our comfort zone, to set sail on uncharted
spiritual waters. And now this year, as
a parish community, as a community of Catholic believers here in Beverly, we are being
asked to go on into even more uncharted waters.
Some of us may be tempted to withdraw within ourselves and not participate
in the process. As the process moves on,
for whatever reasons, some of us may be tempted to jump ship. And on top of all that, we hear that Pope
Benedict is resigning, and now the way forward looks even more uncertain, the
horizon more shrouded in fog, in uncertainty.
What I ask of all us to do is to trust in Him, who built the Bark, the
Ship of St. Peter, trust in him who gave St. Peter the keys of the kingdom, and
asked him to care for the Lord’s sheep; believe in Him who at a word, calm the
winds and the waves. He will bring us to
safe harbor.
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