NB. I've posted this one a couple of times before. . .I wrote it in Rome. . .but I've never preached it, so gonna give it a go this weekend.
1st Sunday of Lent
Fr. Philip Neri Powell,
OP
St.
Ann Church, Bourg, LA
Who
knows what tempts you better than you do? You know the sights that
can draw your eye; the possibilities that make your heart beat a
little faster; the delights that lead you off the righteous path into
the wilderness of sin. If power and prestige can't tempt you, maybe
vengeance or victory can. If food, drink, sex have no inordinate
appeal to you, maybe possessions or dissolute daydreams can grab you.
Though what tempts each of us is calculated to appeal to an
individual weakness, all of our weaknesses together share a common
theme: sell eternal life for the price of a moment's indulgence;
exchange enduring love for temporary affection, divine mercy for
worldly pardon. Temptation is all about showing us what we can have
right now if we would just let go of all that we have been given as
heirs to the Kingdom. The Devil whispers, “Sign over your eternal
inheritance, and I'll give you everything you desire right now.”
You know what you want, right? I mean, you can draw up a list of
desires; catalog everything you need, true? If you can't, no worries.
The Devil is here to help. If anyone knows what you desire better
than you do, it's the Fallen Angel. He's eager to parade all of God's
eternal rewards before you. The catch? Nothing he can show you is his
to give away. So, everything he can show you comes with a price.
We
might wonder why the Holy Spirit leads Jesus into the desert to be
tempted by the Adversary. Is there really any chance that he might
surrender to temptation and fall from his Father's grace? Could the
Devil win? Nope. Jesus can be tempted, but he cannot sin. If he
cannot sin, what's the point of tempting him? Why does the Devil
waste his time? Quite apart from the fact that it is the Devil's
nature to tempt God's children to sin, it's important for us to see
how temptation works, to understand what's so appealing about what
the Devil has to offer and why his wares are so dangerous. The first
thing we must remember about the Devil is that he is a fallen angel.
Once, he was placed at the pinnacle of the Lord's angelic hierarchy.
He enjoyed God's favor; lived at the foot of the Throne. He has seen
what awaits us if we endure in Christ. He also knows that if we
endure in Christ and find ourselves face-to-face with the Divine, his
self-imposed loneliness and despair is made all the more intense. By
enduring in Christ, we abandon for eternity the demonic agenda of
rebellion against our Father. And Rebellion longs for nothing more
than it longs for miserable company. So, the Devil's recruitment
program is simple: offer us our heavenly reward to be enjoyed now;
tempt us to borrow against our inheritance and party 'til it's spent.
Think
about what tempts you. Why do those particular things appeal to you?
What is it about power, prestige, sex, money, vengeance, food/drink,
etc. that draws your eye? Are you so corrupted, so deeply fallen that
you long for these delights? Maybe so. But your corruption doesn't
explain why power, prestige, sex, etc. are appealing. Our fall from
grace doesn't explain the lure of greed or envy or wrath. Pride,
sloth, lust, etc. are all states of a soul already surrendered to
temptation. Why do these souls surrender? Remember what the Devil
knows. He has seen what awaits us if we endure in Christ. Having seen
our perfected reward in heaven, he can show us imperfect copies,
distorted imitations. In fact, the only thing he can tempt us with is
cheap knock-offs, bootlegged versions of the prizes Christ has
already awarded us. The temptation to indulge in inordinate sexual
desire is nothing more than an offer to fake a genuine loving
relationship. The temptation is indulge wrath through vengeance is
nothing more than an offer to distort true justice in charity.
Everything that tempts us to sin is a godly desire perverted to serve
Rebellion.
This
is what Jesus teaches us in the desert. Everything the Devil uses to
lure Jesus into the demonic fold already belongs to the Lord. Christ
already possesses all wealth, all power, all bodily fulfillment. The
only course left to the Devil is to promise to give these treasures
to Jesus now. Skip the teaching and preaching, skip the miracles;
skip the beatings, the ridicule, the Cross. Skip all the nasty,
brutal pain and suffering and all this can be yours. Jesus answers
the Devil by saying, in essence, “These are mine already. You
cannot give what is not yours.” The Devil is defeated not by the
force of Christ's will to endure temptation but by the fact that the
fallen angel has nothing to give, nothing with which to reward those
who surrender to him. All he can do is hold a filthy mirror up to the
Father's heavenly treasures and promise that the murky reflections
are the real thing. The Devil is crushed by truth.
Can
we turn this episode in the desert into a weapon against temptation?
Yes! If the Devil is only able to tempt us using fun-house mirrors to
make fraudulent promises of treasure, then all we need do is
carefully examine what it is that tempts us. If we can discern our
temptations, we can discern what it is that we most desire from God.
If I am tempted by worldly prestige, then perhaps what I most desire
from God is the chance to use my gifts for His glory. If I am tempted
by inordinate sexual desires, then perhaps what I most desire from
God is the gift to truly love without limits. Our weapon against
temptation is not willful, stoic resistance but prayerful discernment
for clarity about what gifts we need to do the work we have been
given to do. Certainly, we can resist temptation but even the
strongest walls eventually fall when placed under siege. At what
point in the battle do we come to believe that by resisting
temptation we are actually refusing a divine gift? That's the
greatest temptation of all! How many Christians commit adultery in
the name of true love? How many Christians welcome the abuse of
worldly power in the name of social justice? Have you ever
surrendered to temptation so that a “greater good” might be
accomplish? It's a trap. A very dangerous, very devilish trap.
You
can spend these forty days of Lent mulling over your sin and seeking
after mercy. That's hardly a waste of the season. But here's a
challenge for you: rather than contemplating past sins, contemplate
on what tempts you to sin. Watch for those times that the Devil draws
you in and then contemplate on what gifts you desire most from God.
The Devil will promise you a knock-off. But only the Lord can give
you a genuine grace.
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