The First Sunday of Lent
predmore.blogspot.com
March 10, 2019
Deuteronomy 26:4-10, Psalm
91; Romans 10:8-13; Luke 4:1-13
Every religion has its own
version of Lent, in which believers atone for their sins and make adjustments
in their relationship with God. Fair enough. It is a good impulse to always
check our actions and attitudes. We want to make sure that it is not an act of
denial and deprivation as punitive actions because we are sinners. We well know
our own faults and we focus on them more than we focus on our goodness. St.
Ignatius of Loyola wants us to see ourselves as loved sinners, with the emphasis
on being loved regardless of our failings. God’s mercy needs to be the focus
because God is always extending help so that we know of God’s overarching care.
Jesus was tempted by comfort,
honor and wealth, and power in the desert, and we are given similar
temptations, but in contemporary ways. We will succumb to those temptations
because we are not Jesus, though we strive to live like him. It is okay to
fail; we just do not want to beat up ourselves. We grab the outstretched hand
of the Lord, we pick ourselves up, and we move on with him.
I want to give you three
questions to ponder as you begin Lent. Here is the first: Ask the Lord to
reveal your sins to you. This prayer practice takes away your tendency to
self-judge, which you will probably do harsher than Christ will. Sometimes we
just make mistakes; other times we miss the mark; often, we mistake angry or
sad feelings for sinfulness. When we remove ourselves from the judging ministry
and give it over to the Lord, we are often surprised. Those failings that we
hold against ourselves, that keep us paralyzed, that weigh us down? He doesn’t
even see them. We needlessly hold our sins against ourselves, and yet, I’m
often surprised that Christ will reveal to me a relationship that is injured or
broken that I have not considered, and he encourages me to examine how I can
mend that friendship. He reveals to me where I have failed to bother to love a
person who is in relationship with me. I’m sad when I find it out, and I never
would have thought of it without his prompting. He then gives me the courage to
mend a relationship, which strengthens a friendship that is important to him.
All sins, every single sin, is relational, and it is important to remember that
he has already forgiven every one of our sins. Therefore, we can live
confidently in his care, but we still have work to do. Our work is to mend
those fractured relationships.
Here is the second question: Ask
the Lord to reveal to you how you have been sinned against. I always find this
intriguing. As I listen to people in spiritual direction or in the
reconciliation room, people mistake having bad or angry feelings with being
sinful. An example of this is: Someone yelled at me and I said something angry
back to them; therefore, I sinned. No. Wrong. The person who yelled at you
sinned. You stood up for yourself in response and protected your boundaries. That
is good. That is healthy. Perhaps you said something mean and hurtful back to
the person, but you would not have said it if you were being treated rightly.
Having anger, speaking your mind, caring for your boundaries are all good
things. We might want to find a better way of expressing our anger so that we
can achieve the good we want and that takes practice through learning new
techniques. However, the Lord will reveal to us those who have sinned or are
sinning against us if we ask. Some of my best moments in prayer have come from
these conversations. I reclaimed self-worth that was getting dented and chipped
away by others. The Lord gave me my real self back to me.
Here is the third question: Ask
the Lord how he wants you to spend your Lent. The church asks for increased
prayer, almsgiving, and fasting, and in our private devotionals, we
instinctively gravitate towards denial and deprivation. Turn your Lent into a
positive one. Before you commit yourself to a practice, ask the Lord how he
would like you to mark this season. Ask him to be creative. Let your sacrifice
be one of praise. Perhaps it is in handwriting a letter to someone each week,
or trying out a long-postponed hobby, inviting someone to meet you for a coffee
or to take a walk, or making an actual phone call to talk with a friend from
long ago. Lent is about the restoration of relationships. Enjoy the time with
each other and know that the Lord is present among you. God has repeatedly told
us in Scripture: I desire mercy, not sacrifice. We have to hear those words.
The three questions are: Lord
Jesus, what are my sins? Lord Jesus, how and by whom have I been sinned
against? Lord Jesus, how do you want me to spend Lent with you? My prayer for
you is that your Lent becomes a holy season. Focus upon your goodness and
invite the Lord into your daily life. Refresh and renew relationships. The Lord
will be near you to guide you. And most importantly, know that Christ wiped away
your sins already and his focus is upon how much he loves you.
Scripture for Daily Mass
First Reading:
Monday:
(Leviticus 19) The Lord gives Moses ten commandments that he inscribes on stone
tablets.
Tuesday:
(Isaiah 55) God’s word will issue forth from his mouth and shall not return
until it has fulfilled his will.
Wednesday:
(Jonah 3) Jonah set out to Nineveh asking them to proclaim a fast and then
repent. The king repents and the Lord dropped his threat because they turned
from evil.
Thursday:
(Esther 3) Queen Esther appeals to God for help in converting the king’s heart for
hatred of the enemy that threatens them.
Friday:
(Ezekiel 18) If the wicked turns from sinfulness and keeps the Lord’s statutes,
he will surely live. Likewise, if a virtuous man becomes wicked, he shall die.
Saturday:
(Deuteronomy 26) Moses tells the people to observe the Lord’s statutes and
decrees with their whole heart and soul. The Lord will stand by you.
Gospel:
Monday:
(Matthew 25) Jesus tells his disciples about the last judgment when the goats
and sheep will be separated. The measuring stick is the mercy shown to the most
vulnerable.
Tuesday:
(Matthew 6) The disciples ask Jesus to teach them to pray. He tells them not to
pray like the pagans, who seek honor and glory, and then gives them the Lord’s
prayer.
Wednesday:
(Luke 11) Jesus chastises the crowd that seeks a sign, but none will be given
to them. Because of Jonah’s preaching, the king and people repented.
Thursday:
(Matthew 7) Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and
the door will be opened. The Father is generous, especially to those who love
him.
Friday:
(Matthew 5) Your righteousness must surpass the levels of the scribes and
Pharisees in order to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Show righteousness by
quickly settling disputes.
Saturday:
(Matthew 5) Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you
may be children of your Heavenly Father. Be perfect as the Father is perfect.
Saints of the Week
No saints are celebrated this week.
This Week in Jesuit History
·
Mar
10, 1615. The martyrdom in Glasgow, Scotland, of St John Ogilvie.
·
Mar
11, 1848. In Naples, Italy, during the 1848 revolution, 114 Jesuits, after much
suffering, were put into carts and driven ignominiously out of the city and the
kingdom.
·
Mar
12, 1622. Pope Gregory XV canonized Sts Ignatius, Francis Xavier, Teresa of
Avila, and Philip Neri.
·
Mar
13, 1568. John Segura and five companions set sail from Spain for Florida, a
fertile field of martyrs. (Nine Jesuits were killed there between 1566 and
1571.)
·
Mar
14, 1535. Ignatius received his degree from the University of Paris.
·
Mar
15, 1632. The death of Diego Ruiz, a great theologian, who studied on his
knees.
·
Mar
16, 1649. The martyrdom in Canada of St John de Brebeuf, apostle to the Huron
Indians. Captured by the Iroquois along with some Christian Hurons, he endured
horrible tortures.
I appreciate your emphasis on renewal. It is to renewal that God calls us when we face where we have sinned or how someone has sinned against us. It is to renewal that God calls us throughout our Lenten journey. We need to be grateful for the sacrifice of the Cross but we need to feel renewed at that end of Lent when we celebrate the Resurrection of our Lord and recognize that Christ is within us and awaits our renewal in him.
ReplyDeleteTurn back to me with your whole heart, says the Lord. If that isn't a renewal, I don't know what is. The goal of Lent is beyond the Cross, it is to the Risen Lord.
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