1st Sunday of Lent
March 10, 2019
Deut 26: 4-10Psalm 91
Rom 10: 8-13
Luke 4: 1-13
Nativity, Washington, D.C.
“He
brought us out of Egypt with his strong hand and outstretched arm … and gave us
this land flowing with milk and honey” (Deut 26: 8-9).
The Exodus (source unknown) |
The 1st reading this morning is a Jewish
profession of faith, a summary of their story of salvation, a testimony of what
God has done for them. Israel went down from
Canaan to Egypt, became slaves, was rescued by the power of God, and led by God
into the Promised Land. Now they give
thanks to him with sacrificial offerings, the 1st part of the annual harvest
(the “firstfruits”). And they worship
him: “having set them before the Lord,
your God, you shall bow down in his presence” (26:10).
That final line from the Deuteronomy reading
is probably the reason for this passage’s linkage with the gospel, in which
Jesus refuses to worship the Devil, reserving his reverence for the Lord alone
(Luke 4:7-8).
But the main thrust of the 1st reading is
Israelite faith, the recollection of and identification with what God has done
to save them. That’s also the thrust of
the 2d reading: our salvation comes from
our faith in Jesus Christ. “If you
believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved”
(Rom 10:9). “Everyone who calls on the
name of the Lord will be saved” (10:13).
We invoke the power of God to save us thru
Jesus Christ because, like the Hebrews enslaved in Egypt, we’re powerless to
save ourselves. God the Father raised
his son Jesus from the dead. We have no power to rise from our graves
except that we attach ourselves to Jesus.
In today’s psalm, it’s Jesus who says to us: “Because he clings to me, I will deliver him;
I will set him on high because he acknowledges my name” (Ps 91:14).
Death—which awaits you and me alike—is the
penalty of sin. God told our 1st parents
that on the day of their disobedience they would forfeit their immortality (Gen
2:17), and St. Paul says bluntly in his letter to the Romans, “The wages of sin
is death” (6:23). As Adam and Eve sinned
by listening to the serpent—symbol of Satan—so do we sin by listening to the enticements
of the Evil One, his appeals to our pride, our anger, our envy, our lust; to
his promises that we can have whatever we want, we’re entitled to it, we
deserve it; to his assurances that we have lots of time to get our act together
and repent; to his suggestions that God’s commandments don’t apply to us in this or that circumstance (in
effect, we’re above the law—doesn’t it make us really mad when some politician
or some clergyman conveys that message? Yet
we do it ourselves when it suits us).
We’ve given in to what the baptismal rite
calls all the Devil’s “works” and “empty promises” so often that we might want
to cry out in anguish with St. Paul—still in his letter to the Romans—“Who will
deliver me from this mortal body” that so rebels against my desire to do what’s
right? (7:24). He answers his own
question: “Thanks be to God thru Jesus
Christ our Lord” (7:25). Jesus has the power
to forgive our sins because, altho innocent of any sin, he’s already paid the
penalty of death for us; and with our sins forgiven because we believe in him
and so are justified—put right with God, made holy by the holiness of Jesus—we
will be saved; we will be raised to eternal life.
For catechumens and others preparing to enter
the Catholic Church, Christ’s Church, this Easter, these 40 days of Lent are
the final preparation for their commitment to God in Christ, to their full
immersion in Christ. For those like us who
made that commitment long ago, each Lent is a call to continuing conversion, to
a renewal of our commitment—which is why all of us renew our baptismal promises
on Easter Sunday.
The story of the temptations of Christ that
we read each year on the 1st Sunday of Lent reminds us of that commitment: to renounce all the enticements of Satan, all
his empty promises, all our sinful ways, and to be faithful to God’s ways, as
Jesus was. As Ps 91 promises, no evil
shall befall those who dwell in the shelter of the Most High; God will be with
them in distress, even beyond the grave, and he will deliver them and glorify
them; with length of days he will gratify them and will show them his salvation
(91:1,10,15-16). So we re-commit
ourselves to be faithful like Jesus, that we might be saved thru him.
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