First Sunday of Lent
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Mount of Temptations |
But most people, whether in the past or in the present, could or cannot physically travel to the Holy Land. In the past it was expensive and dangerous. Today the expense is more the issue than anything (the holy sites are generally very safe, even right now with the animosity and fighting between Israel and Hamas). But St. Francis of Assisi developed the Stations of the Cross, originally just for Franciscan churches, to help people draw closer to the saving events of our Lord’s life from a local church. And even beyond the Stations of the Cross, we are invited to, even if only spiritually, travel with our Lord in these forty days of Lent.
During Lent we are meant to be on our own pilgrimage with the Lord for forty days. We spend forty days in the desert, evoking the forty years the Israelites wandered in the desert between their exodus from slavery in Egypt to their entrance into the Promised Land, as well as the forty days our Lord spent in the desert after His baptism, leading up to His temptation by Satan.
The desert of Lent is meant to test us, to see of what we are made, and to discover the areas in which we still need to grow. If we think back to the Chosen People wandering in the desert, at first they were ecstatic about their freedom. The Egyptians had given their riches to the Israelites, so the liberated slaves had precious materials for their new home to which they traveled. But fairly early on, they started to regret leaving Egypt, even though they were slaves there, and wanted to go back because, even with as bad as it was, they were familiar and comfortable with the bad, which seemed better than the unfamiliarity with a future, unknown, good. They cried to God for water and food, and even created a false god after Moses had gone up to Mount Sinai. The Promised Land was their home, a land God had promised to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, but a land they had left some four hundred years earlier, a land they had forgotten. While the journey to Canaan was not an exceptionally long distance, because of their lack of faith, just as they were at the door of the Promised Land, they had to wander in the desert even longer than originally intended.
Instead of lacking faith, our Lord’s forty days in the desert demonstrates what Lent is supposed to be: still difficult, still a test, but a test that we can pass because He did. Our Lord hungered; our Lord thirsted. But He did not doubt God’s care for Him, and He did not give in to the temptations of the devil.
If we are honest, we are more like the Israelites than like our Lord. Our baptism sets us free from Satan and sin, and God gives us the treasure of His grace, His life, to help us on our way home to heaven, our true Promised Land. But along the way we doubt God. We do not trust Him to provide all that we need. We create false gods whom we feel will lead us better. We forget that we are made for heaven and union with God, and in our selective amnesia, we make our path to God even longer and more difficult than it needs to be.
So this Lent, our goal as we travel on pilgrimage with Christ is to be more like Him, and less like the Israelites. As we fast and abstain, as our stomachs growl, we should remember that we do not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God. As we pray, we do so not to put God to the test, but to bring the desires of our heart to God so that they can be purified and answered according to His will, not to our own insecurities and drive to be in charge. As we give alms, we recognize that true power does not come from money and possessions, the false gods that we create, but from worshipping God alone and allowing Him to exult us.
While the desert is difficult, and tests us to trust more in God and less in ourselves, the desert is not forever. God does not abandon us to wander around for eternity. Christ has opened heaven by His Death and Resurrection, and wants us to end up there if we will follow His path through the desert. The pilgrimage to heaven may be difficult at times, and we may want to turn back to what comforts we think that slavery to sin gives us, or look to other gods of our own making that we think we can control. But if we follow Christ this Lent, and truly seek to allow Him to put to death in us anything which is not of Him, we will find the Promised Land where angels will minister to us as we worship in perfect happiness our true God: [Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen]