If you are looking at a particular sermon and it is removed it is because it has been updated.

For example Year C 2010 is being replaced week by week with Year C 2013, and so on.

Friday, 17 March 2023

4th Sunday of Lent Year A 2023

 

4th. Sunday of Lent (A)

(1 Samuel 16:1, 6-7, 10-13; Ephesians 5:8-14; St. John 9:1-41)

 

There is an important, indeed extremely important, Christian truth heard in all three readings at Mass today.

In the first reading David, the ‘baby’ of his family, was chosen by God to be anointed King of Israel by the prophet Samuel in preference to his older, stronger, and more experienced brothers.

In our second reading St. Paul said:

You were darkness once, but now you are Light in the Lord; walk as children of Light, trying to learn what is pleasing to the Lord.

And elsewhere, the same Apostle wrote to his converts in Corinth (1 Cor. 1:26-28):

Consider your own calling, brothers. Not many of you were wise by human standards, not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth.  Rather, God chose the foolish of the world to shame the wise, and God chose the weak of the world to shame the strong,  and God chose the lowly and despised of the world, those who count for nothing, to reduce to nothing those who are something.

But above all, in the Gospel reading we heard Our Blessed Lord Himself say:

(The man) was born blind so that the works of God might be made visible (manifest) through him. 

God sent His only Son to become Man in order to save all mankind; and He uses certain human individuals to continue and help further that Messianic work of salvation, just as He had used the Israelites, His Chosen People, that they, through their divinely faultless exemplar and most beautiful human embodiment, Mary of Nazareth, and through their inspired prophets and holy, priestly, members might provide a home for the birth and early formation of His supremely Chosen One, His Messiah, His only-begotten Son,  sent by Him to become Man for the salvation of mankind.

But, isn’t that an awful thing to do: use people for your own purposes?

Of course it is wrong for any human being to use others in such a way, but that is not case with God, because He is our Creator, because He is Goodness, Truth, and Life itself, and, as Jesus once said:

I know that His command is eternal life.

 

Dear People of God, there are so many today with no love for God – their personal pride cannot countenance even the thought of obedience on their part – there are so many who are much given to speaking about what God should have done, what he (he, since he is no God for them) ought to do, or, in today’s case, what he should not do!

Our God, however, is a Father we are privileged and proud to obey, and He made us originally in His own image and likeness as the crown of His creation.  When Adam and Eve, using their God-given freedom of will, sinned against God through the deceits of the serpent, God allowed His only-begotten Son, Who was uniquely aware of His Father’s enduring love for us sinners, to become a Man for our salvation.  And, dear People of God, it is  because He loves us so very much, that God can and does use us for His own good purposes which are, precisely, most wisely intended for our own better being and ultimate salvation.

Notice how Jesus was most urgent about showing God’s good purposes in and through this born-blind man: for, without even pausing to ask the man if he had enough faith in Jesus’ power, He willed to begin His work; a  fact which showed that Jesus’ main intention was to do something urgently necessary for His Father’s loving plan of salvation, not something primarily of His (Jesus’) own immediate choosing:

We have to do the works of the One Who sent Me while it is day.  Night is coming when no one can work.

He set about curing the man, not as so often on other occasions with exhortations to faith and words of healing, but by relatively well-known actions (used by local healers etc.) now intended by Jesus to gradually draw the man along with, and into, His own purposes.

He made clay with the help of His spittle from the dust of the earth.  Now God had originally made man from the dust of the earth and Jesus was wanting to show that He – His whole life, indeed, not just this one occasion – was for the restoration and perfection of God’s creative activity:

            My Father is at work until now, so I am at work. (John 5:17)

He then smeared the clay over the man’s eyes to give him hope of healing; and then, to test his faithful obedience, told him to go  – still unseeing! – and wash himself in the pool of Siloam, whereupon, his cure would be completed, and God’s work would be most fully manifested in him and through him to all the Jews and Pharisees around, themselves so wilfully blind in spirit.

The pool of Siloam recalls for us the waters of baptism.   St. John, himself, interprets Siloam as ‘Sent’(9:7) referring to Jesus, ‘sent’ as the Christ for the salvation of the world; and, in Isaias (8:6) we are told that the Jews refused the waters of Siloam, just as they would later reject Christ Himself:

            These people have rejected the gently flowing waters of Shiloah.

And that pool of Siloam (Sent), dear People of God, can still be seen today, filled with water from the Virgin’s Spring. 

The man-born-blind obeyed:

            He went and washed and came back able to see!

‘He came back’ like the Samaritan cured of leprosy, to see and give thanks to Jesus, but Jesus had gone for the moment, and now was the time for the cured-man to give witness to his Healer. 

The Jewish officials repeatedly asked him how Jesus had cured him.  At first, not being suspicious of such authoritative and reputedly ‘holy’ people, he thought they wanted to hear again what he had already fully described, in order to rejoice in the wonderful work that had been done; but at their repeated questioning, and manifesting a more independent attitude than his fearful parents, he retorted:

            I told you already and you did not listen,

and instead you went and troubled my parents.

            Why do you want to hear it again?  Do you also want to become His disciples?’

It would seem that this man born blind had been regularly taken to the synagogue for worship there and for instruction in the traditions of Israel, because he was in no way overawed by his questioners now; indeed he spoke in reply to them as one confident in, and well aware of, his Jewish upbringing and privileges.  Now, moreover, he was beginning, and indeed learning fast, to see into what he had always before unquestioningly assumed; that is, the assumed authority and apparent holiness of these prominent figures now addressing him:

The man answered and said to them, “This is what is so amazing, that you do not know where He is from, yet He opened my eyes.  We know that God does not listen to sinners, but if one is devout and does His will, He listens to him.

And now, dear People of God, we can perhaps be coming to understand perhaps why he had been ‘chosen’ by God; for, in the power of the Spirit of Jesus, he was beginning to show authentic ‘Christian,’ credentials, and was indeed risking a great deal by thus standing up for his healer:

They answered and said to him, ‘You were born totally in sins, and are you trying to teach us?’  Then they threw him out.

Out of the synagogue, that is, and out of official Jewish fellowship.

Whereupon,

When Jesus heard that they had thrown him out, He found him and said, “Do you believe in the Son of Man?”  He answered and said, “Who is He sir, that I may believe in Him?”  Jesus said to him, “You have seen Him and the One speaking with you is He.”  He said, “I do believe, Lord,” and he worshipped Him.

Dear People of God, notice how God quite amazingly brings the blind man into a measure of co-operation with His own purposes, for the born-blind man actually recognizes that he had been specially chosen by God the Father to witness to this extraordinary Man He has sent among men:

It is unheard of that anyone ever opened the eyes of a person born blind.  If this Man were not from God, He would not be able to do anything!

And what was that most important work of God for which the blind-from-birth man was being used?   The manifestation of this sublime truth about Jesus:

            While I am in the world, I am the light of the world.

This ‘ill-used and abused’ -- according to the modern supremely self-righteous critics of God, the ‘woke’ ones -- this unfortunate, born-blind man, had actually, in fact, had his eyes lit, as it were, by Him Who was the true Light of the World!!  Oh happy man, blessed far more than all those Pharisees and Jews around who could only see things of earth!  For his eyes, opened for the first time by Jesus, the Light of the World, were truly seeing eyes, and they led him, to recognize, believe in, and to worship, the Son of Man and Saviour of the world!

Later God would use the death of Lazarus, Jesus’ friend, likewise (John 11: 4):

            This is for the glory of God that the Son of God may be glorified through it!

However, our man-born-blind was, in a certain sense, even more blessed than Lazarus,  because our man-born-blind was led to actually co-operate in some positive manner with the glorification of Him Who was the Light of the World! 

Dear People of God, let God, ask God, to USE you!    Many in our society today are so very much aware of their human and personal rights … and thereby have made themselves far too proud and self-centred in their relations with God to ever allow themselves to be used for His purposes.   And there are others, of timid spirit, who cannot trust themselves to God’s purposes because they are ever fearful for themselves.

Both types are so wrapped up in themselves, be it for personal pride or for fear, that they cannot conceive our central Catholic and Christian truth that God is so good and does so love us that His very using us for His own glory and purposes always and -- humanly speaking one might say, inevitably -- brings us known (now) and unknown (as yet) personal blessings, for our having been humble enough, brave enough, to have allowed and committed ourselves to thus be of use to Him.

Our Father Who art in heaven, hallowed be Thy name. Thy will be done in us, for Thy glory and our blessing in Jesus our Lord and Saviour, by Thy most Holy Spirit of Truth and Love.  Amen, amen.

 

Thursday, 9 March 2023

3rd Sunday of Lent Year A 2023

 

3rd. Sunday of Lent (A)

(Exodus 17:3-7; Romans 5:1-2, 5-8; St. John 4:5-15, 19-26, 39-42)

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The supreme aspiration of ‘former Christians’ who no longer believe in any God is to be THEMSELVES:  A ‘themselves’ that brings them success?  A ‘themselves’ that wins them the admiration of others?  A ‘themselves’,  perhaps more commonly aspired to, is a ‘themselves’ they can enjoy being?

Above all -- however they aspire to ‘being themselves’ – they want to feel free, FREE of any overseeing, conscience-like, presence, making itself known in their personal lives by claiming some authority over the most important decisions and intimate moments of their lives.

And today you can often hear such people saying, ‘All that matters is to do good’. However, the good they mean is,  good as they see it: marriage is for everybody regardless of child-begetting; sexuality is not to be determined by our birth but is to be subject to whatever might be our personal will or preference; the practice self-discipline can be made much easier for anyone finding it too difficult, by all sorts of ‘life adapting’ operations or treatments.

Yes, modern Western societies are seeking to do various ideas of ‘good’ independent of religion; but – after having rid themselves of any God -- the most important thing is to justify themselves before those remnants of ‘conscience' from which they cannot, as yet, deliver themselves.  Therefore, the ultimate criterion for whatever type of good they adopt is that it be popular; for promoting popularity enables those post-Christianity do-gooders to forget themselves and their remnants of individual conscience, by getting fully involved in promoting, spreading, whipping up, what is popular.  And that is not sarcasm but absolute truth … no ‘democratic’ government, party, or caucus, will readily take up and ‘faithfully’ support what is unpopular.

Well, dear friends in Christ, in no way should we wilt before such wide-spread and publicly approved attitudes and opinions; rather, let us today notice Our Blessed Lord speaking -- very much as a man, as a Jewish man, of His times -- words to the Samaritan woman:

You (Samaritans) worship what you do not know; we (Jews) worship what we do know; for salvation comes from the Jews.

Jesus had much fault to find with Jewish practice, but He did not hesitate to tell this Samaritan woman that ‘We’, the Jews, know the truth about God and His offer of salvation.  Jesus had respect for Samaritans, as His parable about the ‘Good Samaritan’ shows; and as also does His delicate reticence when answering His Jewish opponents: and ignoring their reference to ‘a Samaritan’

The Jews answered and said to Him, “Are we not right in saying that You are a Samaritan and are possessed?”  Jesus answered, “I am not possessed; I honour My Father, but you dishonour Me.  (John 8:48–49)

 

Nevertheless, He did not flinch from making it quite clear to the Samaritan woman-at-the-well that they, the Samaritans – as distinct from the Jews -- did not have the fullness of God’s truth in their teaching.  As one commentator (Saunders) writes concerning this part of St. John’s Gospel, ‘By rejecting all of the O.T. but the Pentateuch, the Samaritans had wilfully denied themselves of access to the revelation of  God and shown themselves prone to error…. The old Covenant (with the Jews) may have been incomplete, but it was -- unlike the Samaritan schism -- on the right lines.’

The same can be said of the Catholic Church today, dear People of God, and we should assert aright our Christian pride before all modern, godless, do-gooders.

Our old, enduring Catholic Church, our Mother, has made many human mistakes; some of her supposedly faithful priests and children have made many, much worse, human ‘mistakes’; and she, Mother Church, is still slow in advancing towards the youthful beauty and perfection her Lord requires of her.   Nevertheless, she is still on the right lines, and salvation still comes -- despite all the attacks of her, usually so self-righteous, critics -- through her uniquely authoritative proclamation of Jesus’ Gospel truth and through her sacraments which are the unique and inimitable channels of His heavenly-bestowed saving grace.

The truth – not religiosity, not sentimental love -- was of supreme importance in Jesus’ eyes.  Why was this?  Because the proof that He was the Son of God was His knowledge of the Father:

 

            Righteous Father, the world does not know you, but I know You.    John 17:25)

Truly, truly, the Son can do nothing of His own accord but only what He sees the Father doing; for whatever the Father does the Son does likewise. (John 5:19)

As the Father knows Me and I know the Father … For this reason the Father loves Me because I lay down My life … this charge I have received from My Father.  (John 10:15-18)

 

People of God, Jesus came to give us a share in His own sonship, to make us children of God in Him; do then strive to know your Father, to know your Faith!   Sentimental feelings are not enough, as Jesus Himself said to His disciples:

The Father Himself loves you because you have loved Me and have come to believe that I came from God.  (John 16:27)

Jesus was, as a young boy-cum-man, found by His anxious parents in the Temple:

Sitting in the midst of the teachers listening to them and asking them questions.

What an example for us!!   How few, even among devout Catholics, ask ‘faith and morals’ questions today; how few find the Faith beautiful and ‘interesting’ enough to want, let alone need, to know it better, to understand it more, and to just love it!   Doctrine is there for us (objectively, so to speak), faithfully given us by ‘Old’ Mother Church, to be known and appreciated as God’s gift first of all, before we prayerfully ask God, and calmly consult our own conscience, or even perhaps humbly ask some others for help and/or advice, how best to love and live our Faith.

There are many today, however, who will only pose (not really ‘ask’) a question in order to open up a field for their own opinions and ideas; Jesus, on the other hand, was humble, and we are told that He just listened to the teachers and asked them questions …. with no subsequent ‘but’s, or, ‘it seems to me’, ‘wouldn’t it be better’ etc. etc.

The second point I would like to make is, observe carefully the sort of knowledge of God we should seek: knowledge, and ultimately worship, in Spirit and in Truth.

We receive the truth in the faith which Mother Church hands on to us; but we have then, in our turn, to live that faith for ourselves, that truth, in Spirit; that is, under the guidance, the impulse and protection, of the Holy Spirit of Jesus dwelling in our hearts nourished by the Eucharist.  As I have just mentioned, It is not a faith for our heads alone … it is a faith we are meant also to treasure in our hearts, as did our Blessed Lady, until the warmth of the Holy Spirit dwelling there gradually ignites it and makes it glow, before ultimately causing it to burst into flames – reminiscent of the Spirit Himself -- giving new light and new warmth to all around.

Like the Samaritan villagers in today’s Gospel reading, we believe on hearing the message of salvation; a message received, in our case, from Mother Church’s preaching and teaching.  However, it is not meant to stop there, we are called to then live, and stay, with Jesus (Who stayed two days with those Samaritans; Who invited Andrew and his companion to come and see, to stay a while, with Him).  We in our turn are meant -- in our measure -- to hold and treasure the message we have received, His teaching, in our hearts, and thus come to know Him from our own experience … a person-to-Person knowledge, nourished above all from our closeness to and with Him here at Mass where He sacrifices Himself for us, and gives Himself to us, in Communion.  That is how we too can say with those Samaritan villagers:

We believe and we have heard (learned, experienced) for ourselves, and we know that this (Jesus) is truly the Saviour of the world.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, may our Blessed Saviour draw us, as we proceed with Holy Mass, to an ever-deeper awareness and appreciation of Himself; and in Him, with Him, by His Spirit, to a truly filial trust of, and confident self-commitment to, Him Who is indeed our Father and wills to be our eternal fulfilment.

 

 

Friday, 3 March 2023

2nd Sunday of Lent 2023

 

2nd. Sunday (A), of Lent           

  (Genesis 12:1-4; 2 Timothy 1:8-10; Matthew 17:1-9)

  

My dear brothers and sisters in Christ, how God cherishes us whom He has, today, called into His own presence!  And how long, how carefully, and at what great Personal price, He has prepared the way for our being able to come here rejoicing in love – His love for us and our love for Him – and looking to Him for strength to resist the sin abounding in the world around us and wanting to sneak into our own lives, and for the life that will grow into eternal blessedness as members of Jesus, the Saviour He has sent us.

(He) called us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to His own purpose and grace, which was given to us in Christ Jesus before time began.

After the fall of Adam, God the Father longed to save from the deceits of the devil those He had originally created – in His own image and likeness – free; and in the intimate beatitude of the Most Holy Trinity, His very own Son -- loving His Father with humanly-incomprehensible love -- willed to become one of us, so that He might overcome the devil and death for us. It was His intention that, by thus suffering for us as one of us, He might enable all who would become His disciples to embrace freedom anew, and learn to exercise it, in and for, love of the Father He Himself loved so wondrously.  As Saint Paul told us in our second reading:

He abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel.

Dear friends in Christ, notice for how long God had been preparing the way for our redemption!

Abraham (BC c.2000?) is known to us as our father-in-faith, (Romans 4:16-17) and:

The Lord had said to Abram: “Go forth from your country, from your family and from your father’s house, to a land that I will show you.  I will make you a great nation; I will bless you.

That blessing was for the nations:

            In him (Abraham) all the nations of the earth shall be blessed. (Genesis 18:18)

Moses (BC c.1500?) later spoke in the name of God to the Chosen People of Israel, whom he had led out from slavery to the Egyptians, saying:

The LORD your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among your own brothers. You must listen to Him. (Deuteronomy 18:15)

However, that promised one was not to be just another prophet, because His words would be the very words of God Himself, and those who might refuse to listen to His words would have to answer for that to God Himself:

I will raise up for them a prophet like you from among their brothers; I will put My words in His mouth, and He will tell them everything I command Him.        If anyone does not listen to My words that the prophet speaks in My name, I Myself will call him to account.”   (Deuteronomy 18:18-19)

When Moses had been speaking with God on Mount Sinai, we are told that, unknown to him, his face had become radiant.  Likewise here, when the disciples Peter, James and John, were with Jesus on the mountain, we read that:

(Jesus) was transfigured before them. His face shone like the sun, and His clothes became as white as the light. (Matthew 17:2)

However, whereas the Israelites were afraid to approach Moses because his face was shining, we -- the true Israel -- are exhorted, on the contrary, to fix our eyes upon the transfigured and glorified face of Jesus, by St. Paul who tells us (2 Corinthians 4:6):

God, Who said, "Let light shine out of darkness," made His light shine in our hearts to give us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ.

Jesus was totally transfigured on that mountain top: “was transfigured” is the Hebrew way of saying: “God transfigured Him”: for Hebrew tradition did not allow common use of the name of God, and so, words were always phrased in the passive voice:  “Jesus was transfigured” leaving “by Jahwe” unspoken but understood.  The glory of divinity enveloped the whole body of Jesus.  This should have been the normal state of Jesus’ humanity in His life among  us, but as St. Paul tells us, for our sake He set aside this glory and allowed Himself to be seen as an ordinary man:

Being in very nature God, (He, Jesus) did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made Himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness.   And being found in appearance as (an ordinary) man, He humbled himself (yet further) and became obedient to death-- even death on a cross!  (Philippians. 2:6-8)

Today, however, we worship, and with wonder and awe think of, Jesus-in-glory, for such is the true and eternal Jesus; and we are filled with gratitude as we realise that, because of Jesus’ death and resurrection, our weak human flesh can be taken with, in, Jesus the Christ, as members of the Body of which He is the Head, into heaven.  Our weak, human flesh can, in Jesus, embrace, share and rejoice in, the glory of the omnipotent and all-holy God;   indeed, we can come to share in that very love for the Father that initially led God’s own Son to become Jesus on earth.  

Last Sunday we heard of Jesus being taken to the top of a very high mountain and being shown and offered the glory of the whole world if only He would bow down and worship Satan.  There Satan promised a false and fleeting glory; in today’s Gospel reading, however, we hear of Jesus being enveloped in the true and eternal glory of God:

After six days Jesus took with him Peter, James and John the brother of James, and led them up a high mountain by themselves, and He was transfigured before them.

Jesus was led by the Spirit, called by the Father, to the mountain top as the beloved Son, before His Father as of right.  Notice that He took with Him chosen disciples, not all of them.  He did this to teach us that no office, no function, no calling, not even the calling of an Apostle, can lead human beings into the Father’s presence: only Jesus’ Personal love and choice bestows such a privilege!  And notice also, that He took the three chosen ones into the proximity, not into the immediate presence, of Him Whose voice they heard speaking to them from the cloud.  That proximity is as and how He will lead us too at the end of our days into the Father’s house, as His adopted children.

This is My Son, Whom I love; with Him I am well pleased. Listen to Him!

And there was Jesus alone, transfigured before them: His face shining like the sun, and His clothes gleaming white as the light. 

People of God, this vision is a God-given consolation for us Catholics and our  Orthodox brethren, to the end of Time, because the words of Jesus echo down the ages in Mother Church, who does not even think of changing the teaching words of Jesus to suit modern man.  We can this very day listen to Him because He Himself said to His Apostles:

When the Spirit of truth comes, He will guide you into all truth.  He will not speak on His own; He will speak only what He hears, and He will tell you what is yet to come.  He will bring glory to Me by taking from what is mine and making it known to you.”  (John 16:13-14)

By the Holy Spirit -- Jesus’ parting Gift to us -- His truth would be known to His Church for all time; and that truth is made known, even in our devil-tempted world of today, to all those wanting to hear and to obey the words of God that lead to life, real life, blessed and eternal life, through the teaching of the Apostles:

He who listens to you listens to Me; he who rejects you rejects Me; but he who rejects Me rejects Him Who sent Me." (Luke 10:16)

Those who listen to the Son throughout the ages are being drawn into that final gathering together of God’s chosen People which is being brought about by the Spirit of God, and that process is going on among us, dear People of God, here today.  As with the disciples on the Mount of Transfiguration, we too hear the words and teaching of Jesus and are urged by Mother Church to obey the voice of the Father and “listen to Jesus”.  Mother Church -- in the power of the Spirit given her by her Lord -- will teach us how to obey Jesus, how to rightly love Him; and she exhorts us to have total confidence in Him Who alone, can and will share with us His glory, and lead us and all His faithful disciples into the home of our heavenly Father, to be welcomed by Him as His children, loved in the Beloved, and only-begotten, Son.         


Friday, 24 February 2023

1st Sunday of Lent Year A 2023

 

1st. Sunday of Lent (A),

(Genesis 2:7-9; 3:1-7; Romans 5:12:17-19; Matthew 4:1-11)

 

 

‘In the beginning’ the Serpent, speaking to the woman in the Garden of Eden but targeting the man – Adam -- who had been warned by God against eating fruit from the forbidden tree, directly contradicted God’s words:

You will not die.  For God knows that in the day you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.

In today’s Gospel passage however, when speaking to the second Adam -- Jesus sent by His heavenly Father to be our Lord and Saviour -- the ‘Adversary’ of mankind, Satan, considered it wiser not to openly contradict the words spoken by the Father at Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan:

 This is My beloved Son, in Whom I am well pleased, (Matthew 3:17-4:1)

because he was not sure with Whom he was dealing.  And therefore, being somewhat hesitant, instead of directly contradicting what the Father had said, he tried to insinuate some seed of doubt into the mind of this challenger from Nazareth:

            If You are the Son of God, command that these stones become bread.

Jesus’ period of testing in the desert had gone on for a full forty days and nights, and the devil apparently thought that a few carefully chosen words of his at the end of it, when Jesus was physically close to exhaustion, might cause Him to wonder whether His visionary experience at His baptism by John in the Jordan had been as real as He had first thought.  Satan hoped that Jesus -- having been very much alone for forty days and nights and now feeling very weak from starvation -- might seize an opportunity to both satisfy His hunger and bolster up His morale, so to speak, under the pretext of showing him, Satan, to be mistaken and wrong

However, Jesus had no burgeoning doubt to assuage, no clamouring hunger demanding satisfaction as soon as possible; He had nothing to prove to Himself, and He had no intention whatsoever of giving Satan the satisfaction of an answer to his question.  Jesus, therefore, made it supremely clear where He found His true nourishment:

He answered and said, "It is written, 'Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.' "

Jesus, the Son of God, sent, as Messiah, to save God's People from their servitude to sin, was being tempted as the early Israelites had been, when they were being led through the desert towards the Promised Land under the guidance of Yahweh their God and the leadership of Moses their prophet.   On that journey, Israel of old -- sinful children of their sinful mother Eve -- had behaved as she did: they would not to trust God and, on beginning to feel the pangs of hunger, they complained bitterly against Moses saying that God was planning to kill them in the desert.  They openly expressed their longing for a return to the slavery of Egypt where food was plentiful.  Later on Moses reminded them of their behaviour saying:

Remember that the LORD your God led you all the way these forty years in the wilderness, to humble you and test you, to know what was in your heart, whether you would keep His commandments or not.  So He humbled you, allowed you to hunger.  Do not forget how you provoked the LORD your God to wrath in the wilderness.      (Deuteronomy 8:2-3; 9:7)

Jesus, on the other hand, had shown Himself to be in no way subject to that over-riding solicitude for self which is characteristic of fallen humanity: suffering and trial could not lead Him either to suspect His Father or abuse His gifts.  Satan therefore turned his attention from Jesus’ human make-up, to His divine mission: he homed in on Jesus’ desire to be recognized and accepted as the Redeemer and Saviour of Israel.

Satan had noted Jesus’ reference to the Scriptures and so, continuing his attempt to find out just Who Jesus might be, he took Him to the Holy City, Jerusalem, set Him on a pinnacle of the Temple, and said: ‘Here, on this pinnacle of the world-famous Jewish temple is just the spot to prove yourself and win your people.   Here, you can do something that would resound throughout Israel and it would be fully in accordance with the Scriptures You quote so lovingly; it would be something whereby the whole Jewish nation could easily recognize that the Lord has chosen and appointed you, therefore:

If You are the Son of God, throw Yourself down. For it is written: 'He shall give His angels charge over you,' and, 'In their hands they shall bear you up, Lest you dash your foot against a stone.'

Jesus,  unmoved, replied:

            It is written again, 'You shall not tempt the LORD your God.'

Now we, who have -- as St. Paul says -- ‘the mind of Christ’, know that Jesus had not come among men for His own human aggrandisement or satisfaction, nor had He entered upon His divine mission for the well-being of Israel alone: He had come, He had been sent by His Father, for the salvation of the whole of mankind.

Satan, however, knew neither Jesus nor His Mission fully, and his temptations were only diabolically cunning shots-in-the-dark.  He seems to have disdainfully thought that any human-being could be tempted successfully provided that the stakes were high enough; therefore he made one further attempt to derail Jesus’ Mission:

Again, the devil took Him up on an exceedingly high mountain, and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory.  And he said to Him, "All these things I will give You if You will fall down and worship me.

At that moment Satan -- in the fullness of his maniacal pride and ambition -- overreached himself, and Jesus, no longer tolerating his presence, responded by a manifestation of His own authority, before adding the words of Scripture:

Away with you, Satan! For it is written, 'You shall worship the LORD your God, and Him only you shall serve.'

‘Away with you, Satan!’   Words cannot express the loathing, revulsion, and anger of Jesus’ reply … but we can recall that years after, at the very end of His mission,  He relived once again -- and once more rejected with startling vehemence -- this desert experience when Peter tried to persuade Him to follow an easier path than that of the Cross (Matthew 16:23):

He turned and said to Peter, "Get behind Me, Satan! You are an offence to Me, for you are not mindful of the things of God, but the things of men."          

In the temptations of Jesus in the desert we recall, as I have mentioned, Israel’s trials in the desert of Sinai on the way to the Promised Land, in particular the occasion when Moses told the Israelites:

When the LORD your God brings you into the land of which He swore to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, then beware, lest you forget the LORD who brought you out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage.  You shall fear the LORD your God and serve Him.     (Deuteronomy 6:10-14)

Now Jesus sums up, and fulfils, in Himself the history and calling of Israel, the Chosen People; but He also prepares for the future world-wide People of God, the Church that would be His Body and Bride, the Church whose Head and Saviour He would be.   Therefore, these temptations of Jesus in the desert are to be understood in all the fulness of their purpose and meaning: they are for mankind’s salvation and for the  instruction and confirmation of all who would be His disciples.

We can recognize ourselves in the first temptation of Jesus, for violent people say so often these days, “I, we, had no alternative”, “we have to bring the world’s attention to this matter”, “we have to register a protest”.  These people always find themselves obliged, driven, to do what is otherwise inexcusable.  Let us learn from Jesus, People of God, starving after 40 days and nights in the desert, He would in no way abuse His divine gifts to get earthly satisfaction.  Nothing can oblige, or allow, a Christian to do what is against God’s teaching.

Again, in all three temptations of Jesus, Satan endeavoured to stir up suspicion of God’s love and providential care.  How many Christians, today, succumb to this temptation!  They fall away from God because they begin to doubt that He is with them, they are not sure He is hearing them, they are unaware of His helping, guiding, hand in their lives.  “I don’t feel anything; He makes no sign.  If only I could be conscious of His presence, if He would only answer, I would be satisfied.”  In some such way they begin to demand a sign from God, a sign to convince them that His Providence is with them; and some,  on receiving no such sign, turn away from the true Faith and seek refuge in religious sects which provide them with all sorts of pseudo-divine signs.

Still others try to stir up signs for themselves by rashly setting aside faith and reasonable behaviour and pushing themselves to become neurotically excited and disturbed.  You will see some of these in popular churches doing all sorts of strange antics or excessive practices, and how many pseudo-Muslims worship their god because he allows them to cherish and seek, seek, seek, revenge.

Many Catholic, however, complaining that God is silent in their lives, simply fall away from the Faith; and, as it were returning to Egypt's slavery, turn aside to enjoy the pagan life-style of the surrounding society, trying to forget their conscience in a maelstrom of worldly endeavours, comforts, pleasures, distractions, and inevitable worries.

Finally, in the third temptation of Jesus we have the situation of those who do indeed set out to do the work of God – proclaiming Catholic teaching, and trying to explain its truth and show its beauty -- but allow themselves to become discouraged at little result or apparent failure.   They then resort to making just a few slight compromises and minimal accommodations acceptable to popular tastes, done with the apparently laudable aim of recording success where previously there had only been what seemed failure.  Thenceforth, however, all the high aims and loving purposes still being avowedly pursued are increasingly subject to their too human desire for results, good results, successful results, above all, acceptable results.  The ultimate end for such victims of the devil's deceits is that, far from worshipping God as they started out, they end up worshipping the devil in his very best clothes!  They worship him who gives them humanly appreciable and acceptable success in God's works!   They both distrust and fear the humility, the waiting and trusting, the hoping and praying, involved in worshipping God whole-heartedly, and then leaving the  results to Him alone.   

Our evangelist, however, would have us never forget that, when Jesus had successfully overcome His trials:

            The devil left Him, and behold, angels came and ministered to Him.

And we too, now turn to God’s abiding Gift, with us in Mother Church, and in us, through true faith and the Body and Blood of Our Lord Jesus, and trustfully beg Him to lead us, strengthen us, in the ways of Jesus, that we may -- in life and death -- give glory to God our Father, forward the salvation of all those of good will, and in the life to come, find our own ultimate fulfilment as children of God able to sit at the festal table of God’s heavenly rejoicing in His heavenly Kingdom.