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when Lent was still exactly 40 days (before Ash Wednesday and the 3 following
days got added on), Lent began today, with this Sunday (as it still does in
Milan, Italy, where to this day there is still no Ash Wednesday). In our modern
rite, this is the day when those who have responded to the good news of Jesus
by becoming candidates for Baptism or full membership in the Catholic Church this
coming Easter are presented to our Bishop at our cathedral, to make their own
the Church’s faith in Jesus and the Church’s way of becoming his disciple. That
faith, that way of becoming a disciple – what St. Paul, writing to the
Christians in Rome, called confessing
with one’s mouth that Jesus is Lord and believing in one’s heart that God
raised him from the dead – are what Lent has always been about.
And
so, every year, we begin our Lent the way Jesus began his mission – not in
flamboyant miracles, exciting accomplishments, and popular acclaim, but in the
threatening silence and solitude of the desert.
That
was where Jesus made his Lent – in the desert, the domain of the devil, whose
many titles include liar and father of
lies. The devil lied when he equated being Son of God with power to
be used for purely personal advancement. He lied again when he tried to
divert Jesus from his mission with the kinds of illusions that, in our society
especially, pass for success, illusions of being a winner, of being great,
thereby anticipating what may ultimately be remembered as one of our
contemporary American religion’s most terrible temptations – the temptation to
political power. He lied yet again when he equated being Son of God with
special effects and popular acclaim, thereby anticipating what may ultimately
be remembered as one of our contemporary culture’s most distinctive
characteristics – equating celebrity with significance.
The
devil’s lies live on in our world today. We know from the sad state of our
public life that we don’t have to run off to the desert to be lied to!
The
devil’s lies and Jesus’ responses reveal the deeper underlying reality
reflected in all the human choices we make – choices that in a real sense both
make us who and what we are and reveal us to each other and to ourselves.
Every
Lent, the same Spirit that led Jesus into the desert leads us to spend 40 days
with him in the same place where it led him, in the desert that threatens and
challenges us to choose – to choose not just whether or what to eat, but what
we want to make of our life – a life lived in faithfulness to truth or a life
lived in thrall to the devil’s lies, to the illusions accompany earthly power,
and the delusions that accompany popularity.
When the devil had
finished every temptation,
we are told, he departed for a time.
That time came when Jesus returned to Jerusalem, not to the parapet of the temple, but to the top of the cross, where the
devil’s challenge would be confronted again and all his lies finally refuted,
when Jesus’ choice of obedience to his Father would finally reveal both who he
really is and what true power and glory
really are.
Lent
is our opportune time to meet up with the real Jesus – undefeated in the desert
and victorious on the cross – to learn whether and what kind of difference
confessing him with the mouth and believing in him in the heart can really make
– for us and for our world.
Homily for the 1st
Sunday of Lent, Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, March 10, 2019.
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