
Beginning the Journey of Lent
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde Special to the
Herald
(From the issue of 2/17/05)
The following homily was given by Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde at the
Mass for the First Sunday of Lent on Feb. 13 at the Cathedral of St. Thomas
More in Arlington.
There is a saying that a journey of one thousand miles begins with the
first step. You and I took the first step of a very specific journey just
five days ago. What is this journey we are taking? The journey called Lent!
The journey towards Easter! The journey of our conversion!
In some ways, this is not a new journey, because the journey of living as
a disciple of Christ began at Baptism. Yet, this is a new journey, an annual
journey, in fact, a familiar journey. We need to make this journey this Lent
and every Lent because we are different people from the way we were the
previous year; we are at new and different stages on the journey of
Christian living. Above all, this Lent and every lent, we stand in need of
conversion, of turning back to the Lord, of choosing more deeply God’s way
over our own.
Each day brings us choices. Shall we think, speak and act the way Jesus
would or shall we choose instead our way and our will? In the end, we are
being asked to choose between good and evil.
Is this not what temptation is all about? Temptation is not actually
sinning; it is the testing of how we choose: God’s way or our way.
Today’s first reading from the Book of Genesis, the first book in the
Bible, portrays with colorful imagery the choice or test faced by Adam and
Eve. As we heard, they chose their way, not God’s and thereby committed the
first sin, original sin. We, who possess the same human nature as Adam and
Eve have inherited a certain inner weakness, a certain tendency to follow
their example of choosing our way and will over God’s.
When we act like Adam and Eve, choosing our will over God’s, then we sin.
During the past year, if we are honest, we must admit that we have, in fact,
sinned, choosing our will and not God’s; in fact, we have thought, spoken
and acted in ways totally opposite to the way in which Jesus would think,
speak and act.
God knows our human frailty and weakness, our proneness to sin. He knows
that we have, in fact sinned. Today, we honestly confess our failing the
test, our sinning. "Be merciful, O Lord, for we have sinned."
And in response to our admission of sin, God gives us a Saviour to free
us from our sinfulness; God gives us His own Beloved Son as our Saviour.
Moreover, He gives us in Christ the example of overcoming temptation. The
power of Christ in us — the power of divine grace — enables us to say "no"
to the temptations or testings of the Evil One and to say "yes" to God our
Father, just the way Christ did in today’s Gospel account.
In His human nature, Christ was strengthened by the 40 days He spent in
the desert, praying and fasting. Lent is our 40-day desert journey whereby
through prayer, penance and almsgiving, we too are strengthened to overcome
the tests, the temptations, and, as St. Irenaeus wrote, "to persevere and to
remain in God’s service."
You and I need to travel this journey called Lent! God is calling us to
reclaim and to deepen the dignity and destiny He gave us at Baptism: the
dignity of being His sons and daughters and the destiny of inheriting
eternal life.
Each day during this Lent, the contrast between Adam and Christ evident
in today’s first and third readings and referenced by St. Paul in his Letter
to the Romans, (our second reading), will be the focus of our attention.
Shall we be like Adam, who chose his own will and disobeyed God or shall we
be like Christ, Who chose God’s Will and obeyed His Father in loving trust?
The temptations or tests we face are not easy. But, we do not face them
alone. Christ desires to be with us, if only we let Him enter our lives!
So then, this Lent, let us travel, not alone, but with the Lord Jesus,
our Saviour. If we open our hearts in welcome, He will accompany us as we
pray together at home — a family united, as we celebrate the Sacraments of
the Holy Eucharist and Penance — God’s people assembled in faith, as we
relive Christ’s journey to Calvary through the Stations of the Cross,
individually or as a parish community — disciples walking in His footsteps,
as we embrace penance and fasting — disciples linked together by
self-discipline, as we assist through almsgiving those in need — God’s
people reaching out in charity.
As we, the baptized, journey this Lent, we realize that some others are
walking alongside us: those preparing for Baptism and those already baptized
who are seeking full communion in the Catholic Church or who are preparing
for Confirmation and the Eucharist. These are sisters and brothers to us
and, later today, on this First Sunday of Lent, they will be enrolled as
members of the elect or will be called to continuing conversion. As we
journey towards Easter, seeking to become more converted ourselves, we also
make a commitment to those making the journey for the first time, pledging
to them the support of our prayers and the encouragement of our example.
The poet Robert Frost once wrote: "Two roads diverged in a road and I — I
took the road less traveled by. And that has made all the difference." For
the disciples of Jesus, the road less traveled by is the road labeled Lent.
We have taken the first step down that road, the first step in the journey
of our deepening conversion.
If we travel together as the church, united with Christ Jesus, we can
truly become more converted this Lent, more transformed into the image of
Jesus, Who was faithful to God in His temptations. And that will make all
the difference in our families, in this parish and diocese, in the Church
beyond us and throughout the world!
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