First Sunday of Lent
[In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.] There would come times my youth when I was sitting on a Saturday morning, watching cartoons and eating cereal, and my mom would be talking to me, letting me know what chores I had to do that day or any special events that were happening later in the day. I was sure I could do two things at once, so I would try to hear what she was saying while also not missing key plot points in my Saturday morning shows. She would (often correctly) not believe that I was listening, and would ask, “Did you listen to what I said?” “Yep,” I would reply, to which she would continue, “Then what did I say?” My answer would betray whether I was simply hearing or whether I was listening.
The Gospel we heard today, hopefully to which we listened, deal precisely with those two aspects of receiving sound: hearing and listening. Maybe that was not clear, but as we heard about the temptations of our Lord, we could garner an important lesson about the difference between hearing and listening.
To start, though, we should go back all the way to the Book of Genesis, to the beginning, when Adam and Eve were in the Garden [as we heard in our first reading]. God had told them that they could have any good fruit to eat, except the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Perhaps Adam and Eve were listening to God when He was speaking thus, or perhaps they were not fully giving the attention that listening requires, and just responded, “uh huh.” In any case, Eve certainly did listen to the serpent, the Devil, who asked, “‘Did God really tell you not to eat from any of the trees in the garden?’” Eve seems to know what God says, but she has already agreed to listen to the Devil, and so she gives in to the temptation to disobey God. She then brings Adam into her disobedience, and since Adam represented all humanity, all of humanity fell in Adam’s disobedience (as St. Paul states in his epistles).
Hearing means receiving the auditory stimuli. Listening means understanding what is being said, and taking that understanding to heart. Look to the Gospel today, and Christ, the new Adam, hears the Devil tempting Him, but does not listen. The Devil three times tries to get our Lord to listen, by tempting Him with sins against temperance (a disordered desire for food), against trust (putting God to the test), and against humility (putting someone or something else in the place of God). Our Lord certainly hears what Satan is saying, but pays no more attention to it than a kid watching Saturday morning cartoons when mom is talking. What Christ does listen to is the Scriptures, as He is able to respond with God’s Word: “‘One does not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes forth from the mouth of God.’”; “‘You shall not put the Lord, your God, to the test.’”; “‘The Lord, your God, shall your worship and him alone shall you serve.’” The Savior had not only heard what God said, but understood its deeper meaning and took it to heart, which allowed him to recognize the lies of the enemy, and to let them run off his back like water on a duck.
However, if we believe those lies, if we listen to Satan, that is when we act on those temptations, and that is when we sin. Parents, teachers, coaches, and others probably told us when we were younger that we can only listen to one thing at a time. When it comes to the spiritual life, that is true. We either listen to God and take in what He tells us, or we listen to the devil, and take in what he tells us. If we’re listening to God, we may hear the devil tempting us, but we don’t fall away. If we’re listening to Satan, we ignore the voice of God in our hearts, what we call the conscience, which helps us know what to do and what not to do.
Tomb of St. Benedict in Monte Cassino |
Lent is the perfect time to work on our listening. What messages do we take in to our lives each day and each week? To whose voice are we more attentive? One of the great ways to make sure that we listen to God is to read His Word. Yes, Satan could quote Scripture, but when we’re familiar with the entire story; when we take into our hearts the message that God has for us in the Bible, we can better recognize the lies that the devil tells us. In fact, sometimes I’ll counsel people in the confessional that when they feel tempted, they should, whether outlaid or to themselves, simply say, “That is a lie.” I use this sometimes in my own spiritual life when I am undergoing temptation. I’ll say, “That is a lie,” or “That is not from God,” and often times the temptation flees away immediately. Sometimes I have to repeat it a few times. But the key is that my mind and my heart are able to block out the sounds of Satan, but hold fast to the Word of God. Yes, I may have no choice but to hear the temptations, but I do not have to listen to them and give them credence.
This Lent, let’s work on our listening. Be attentive to “every word that comes forth from the mouth of God,” so that we do not “put the Lord, your God, to the test,” and do worship and serve him alone [through our Lord Jesus Christ, his Son, who lives and reigns in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God for ever and ever. Amen].