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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home1/deedisal/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121You’ve undoubtedly heard the bad news about the war. There’s a temptation sometimes with news like this to view it just as something that happened to someone else in a faraway place. There’s a temptation sometimes to say to ourselves, “Meh. Is this really relevant to me? How does this news have any impact on my life?” With this temptation in mind, imagine with me for a moment living in this place where the battle rages on. …
The once peaceful place you call home has been invaded and is now occupied by a ruthless regime, which is led by demonic tyrant. There seems to be no use trying to negotiate with this tyrant. Life in recent days, has been hellacious. It already seems like this battle has been going on forever. You have lost so many of your fellow men, women, and children. As far as you can see, there is no way easy way out from the hell on earth you’re living in. Life seems to be overshadowed by death and you are just trying to make it through the day. The future, well, you don’t even want to think about it. But as for the present, you know that it’s time to take a stand against the enemy, no matter what the cost might be. …
I’m speaking, of course, of the devil’s assault on Jesus in the desert from today’s Gospel reading. If this sounds similar to the news of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, it makes me wonder, is the Gospel just news to us? Is the Gospel just something that happened to someone else in a faraway place that doesn’t seem relevant to our lives here today? If the Gospel is just news, it is tempting for us to say, “Meh. Is this news really relevant to me? How does this news have any impact on my life?” With this temptation in mind, let us go with Jesus, walk next to him, and watch him as he is led by the Holy Spirit into the desert for 40 days to be tempted by the devil. …
As Jesus is being led by the Holy Spirit into the desert, pay attention to how he looks to you. Is he going into the desert looking afraid or is he going into the desert looking eager to take a stand against the devil? As Jesus goes without food for 40 days, is Jesus bent over with unbearable hunger pangs or does Jesus look you in the eyes with resolve in his voice and say, “I could go for another 40 days without food, because I’m doing this for you.”?
As the devil comes at Jesus with the first temptation, does Jesus try to convince himself of the lie that what he does in private when there is no other person looking doesn’t really matter or does Jesus look right through space and time into your eyes today and tell you the truth that the decisions we make in these moments matter? As the devil assaults Jesus with the second and third temptations, does Jesus look weak and near defeat, or does he look over to you and say with strength in his voice, “I am doing this so that together, we can take the enemy down.”? …
As the devil departed from Jesus for a time, the devil actually retreated from this battle licking his wounds. It is important for us to know about this war. If we don’t know about this war, it is hard for us to make sense of what is going on in the Bible, the world around us, and inside each of us. If we don’t understand how the enemy operates, it is hard for us to understand the relevance all this has in our lives and the role we have to play. If we don’t know this bad news of temptation and sin, the Gospel is just news to us. Meh. If we don’t know the bad news of the war the devil started with temptation and sin, we have a hard time understanding that what Jesus has done for us and continues to do for us is in fact really good news. Out of the bad news of the war, come seven pieces of good news for each of us. You may say, “Seven! Come on Deacon, seven that’s a lot.” Yes, seven. You have one piece of good news to focus on each day this week.
You see, it’s all personal. Every one of our stories borrows from the greatest story of all. When we make Jesus’ story our own story, it is then we discover the Gospel for what it truly is for each of us. It is then that the Gospel goes from being just some piece of irrelevant news to becoming life-changing very good news.
You see, it’s all personal. Every one of our stories borrows from the greatest story of all. When we make Jesus’ story our own story, it is then we discover the Gospel for what it truly is for each of us. It is then that the Gospel goes from being just some piece of irrelevant news to becoming life-changing very good news.
1st Sunday of Lent Cycle C – March 6, 2022
Mass Readings:
Reading 1: Dt 26:4-10
Psalm: Ps 91:1-2, 10-11, 12-13, 14-15
Reading 2: Rom 10:8-13
Gospel: Lk 4:1-13