Readings: DT 26:4-10; ROM 10:8-13; LK 4:1-13
In the first reading, Moses reminds the people of their extraordinary journey. They started as a wandering tribe, ended up enslaved and oppressed and, ultimately, found a new home where they thrived as a people. They are reminded, however, that they did not do this themselves. God brought them through and, because of that, they needed to give God the “firstfruits” from the land as a form of gratitude and recognition.
More than anything else, the Hebrew scriptures keep coming back to this theme: remember what God has done for you, and during Lent, we’re invited to remember all that God has done for us – all of the blessings, all of the connections, all of the sustaining – and to say thank you in concrete ways with our lives.
Then we hear Paul tell the Romans that, “The word is near you, in your mouth and in your heart.” There is an intimacy that Paul wants to remind us about. God is not “out there” so much as “in here” and close to us. And God is the life force that animates and connects everything.
I love the Star Wars movies, and I often think of God being like “the force.” The great Jedi teacher Obi-Wan Kenobi tells a young Luke Skywalker that the force is an “energy field created by all living things…it surrounds us and penetrates us…and binds the galaxies together.” And like the young Luke Skywalker, we must practice tuning in to the force in our lives so that we can tap into this power.
But like any power, this energy can be used for good or in other ways.
In the gospel, we read of Jesus’ temptation to use his power in ways that are not aligned with what he knows his mission to be. I’d point out two things here. First Jesus has already aligned himself with the energy of God and has been practicing tuning in to it. Secondly, Jesus is clear on who he is and who he is not. So when “the devil” visits him in the desert and offers him an alternate path that would elevate Jesus and make him popular, impressive and successful, he is clear and can say, “No!”
Most of us likely do not have this level of clarity in our own lives, and we live in a culture whose values all seem to align more with the temptations than with the gospel. It takes work not to go along with the flow.
And so during Lent, we intentionally pursue a path of quiet and contemplation (what 14th century mystic Meister Eckhardt spoke of as a spirituality of subtraction) so that we can do what all 3 readings would have us do: Remember what God has done for us, tune in to the power of God around us and stay true to our call.
4 Comments
Marilyn Rizzo-Ferris
I wonder what my first fruits are to give God gratitude and recognition. Are my fruits the awareness of body, mind and spirit? Are they the ability of being patient and kind, willing to share, to help, to comfort? Or is it more? Is it something else totally? Is it being so thankful for all that I have gained in knowledge, of life, in my profession, in the people I have met along my journey? These are all things I ponder. I am grateful for my body and all my senses and for how the illnesses I have endured have made me more aware of others’ circumstances, challenges and experiences. I believe that we have the energy “within” and “without. We need to “feel” that energy that I believe “just is” within our reach. I am thankful for the silence that allows me to be more aware. I am thankful for prayer. I am thankful for the sound of life growing all around me. It happens in the silence of my prayer.
Mike Boucher Author
Marilyn, great reflection questions for all of us to think about. Thank you!
Mike Bleeg
I want to be an on-going link to God’s power. I need that spiritual power. Also, I need to give that power to other people and nature around me to strengthen the kingdom of heaven here on earth. This is how I will live on before and after I physically die.
Mike Boucher Author
I love the idea of that, mike, to be an ‘on-going link to God’s power’ which we draw from and then give away. Beautiful!
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