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Catholic Caucus: Sunday Mass Readings, 02-22-15, First Sunday of Lent
USCCB.org/RNAB ^ | 02-22-15 | Revised New American Bible

Posted on 02/21/2015 8:27:24 PM PST by Salvation

February 22, 2015

First Sunday of Lent

 

Reading 1 Gn 9:8-15

God said to Noah and to his sons with him:
"See, I am now establishing my covenant with you
and your descendants after you
and with every living creature that was with you:
all the birds, and the various tame and wild animals
that were with you and came out of the ark.
I will establish my covenant with you,
that never again shall all bodily creatures be destroyed
by the waters of a flood;
there shall not be another flood to devastate the earth."
God added:
"This is the sign that I am giving for all ages to come,
of the covenant between me and you
and every living creature with you:
I set my bow in the clouds to serve as a sign
of the covenant between me and the earth.
When I bring clouds over the earth,
and the bow appears in the clouds,
I will recall the covenant I have made
between me and you and all living beings,
so that the waters shall never again become a flood
to destroy all mortal beings."

Responsorial Psalm Ps 25:4-5, 6-7, 8-9.

R. (cf. 10) Your ways, O Lord, are love and truth to those who keep your covenant.
Your ways, O LORD, make known to me;
teach me your paths,
Guide me in your truth and teach me,
for you are God my savior.
R. Your ways, O Lord, are love and truth to those who keep your covenant.
Remember that your compassion, O LORD,
and your love are from of old.
In your kindness remember me,
because of your goodness, O LORD.
R. Your ways, O Lord, are love and truth to those who keep your covenant.
Good and upright is the LORD,
thus he shows sinners the way.
He guides the humble to justice,
and he teaches the humble his way.
R. Your ways, O Lord, are love and truth to those who keep your covenant.

Reading 2 1 Pt 3:18-22

Beloved:
Christ suffered for sins once,
the righteous for the sake of the unrighteous,
that he might lead you to God.
Put to death in the flesh,
he was brought to life in the Spirit.
In it he also went to preach to the spirits in prison,
who had once been disobedient
while God patiently waited in the days of Noah
during the building of the ark,
in which a few persons, eight in all,
were saved through water.
This prefigured baptism, which saves you now.
It is not a removal of dirt from the body
but an appeal to God for a clear conscience,
through the resurrection of Jesus Christ,
who has gone into heaven
and is at the right hand of God,
with angels, authorities, and powers subject to him.

Gospel Mk 1:12-15

The Spirit drove Jesus out into the desert,
and he remained in the desert for forty days,
tempted by Satan.
He was among wild beasts,
and the angels ministered to him.

After John had been arrested,
Jesus came to Galilee proclaiming the gospel of God:
"This is the time of fulfillment.
The kingdom of God is at hand.
Repent, and believe in the gospel."



TOPICS: Catholic; General Discusssion; Prayer; Worship
KEYWORDS: catholic; lent; mk1; prayer
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A Christian Pilgrim

JESUS WAS TEMPTED BY SATAN

(A biblical refection on THE FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT [YEAR B], 22 February 2015)

kiman-ilustrasi-masa-prapaskah-dimulai-apr-2014-hidup-katolik

Gospel Reading: Mark 1:12-15 

First Reading: Genesis 9:8-15; Psalms: Psalm 25:4-9; Second Reading: 1 Peter 3:18-22

The Scripture Text

The Spirit immediately drove Him out into the wilderness. And He was in the wilderness forty days, tempted by Satan; and He was with the wild beasts; and the angels ministered to Him. 

Now after John was arrested, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the Gospel of God, and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand; repent, and believe in the Gospel.” (Mark 1:12-15 RSV) 

Temptations are an ever present reality in our lives. They are not just temptations of the flesh, but also of injustice or dishonesty, e.g., unjustly paying our workers, overpricing, graft, discrimination against people with different beliefs, or different ethnic backgrounds, etc.

Today’s Gospel message relates how Jesus underwent temptations in the desert and how He struggled to overcome them, thus setting for us an inspiring example (Please read the more detailed version in Luke 4:1-13).

DIGODA IBLIS - 16

How did Jesus handle the temptations and how do they relate to contemporary life? First the tempter was sweet-talking Jesus to use His powers for His own personal aggrandizement. “If You are the Son of God, command these stones to turn into loaves” (Luke 4:3). There is always the temptation for us to use selfishly whatever powers or talents God has given us. A person, for instance, may possess an innate ability to sing. She/he may “cash in on it,” refusing to use it unless she/he is paid. There is no reason why she/he should not use it for pay, but there is no reason too why she/he should use it “only” for pay! This can apply to other gifts like intelligence, business acumen, artistic skill.

But there is another side to this temptation. Jesus was God’s Messiah, and He knew it. The question was: What “method” would He use for the task which God had given Him to do? One sure way to attract people to turn to God was to give them bread, to give material enticements. However, it would have been a serious mistake. For one thing that would have been bribing people to follow Him which, no doubt, would be the easy way. It would have made Him popular but it was not the right way. What Jesus offered was the hard way – the cross.

In the second temptation, Jesus was challenged by the devil to “throw Himself down (the parapet of the Temple) but would not get hurt since the angels would rescue you.” In short, do something sensational. Make miracles. Most people have a penchant for the extraordinary and miraculous. Thus some people take great pains to travel to distant shrines like Medjugorje to boost their faith – in the process contribute to the thriving business of travel agencies!

The trouble is that we’re so drawn to the extraordinary and miraculous that we overlook the many “miracles of faith” that are happening quietly in the day-to-day struggles of life. For instance, isn’t it a miracle that strong, happy families survive in an environment of broken marriages? Or isn’t it a divine wonder that not a few Christians keep their religious convictions, practise honesty, compassion, altruism despite an environment of dishonesty, injustice and greed?

The tempter’s third avenue of assault was for Jesus to “fall down and worship me, and I will give You all the kingdoms of this world” (Luke 4:6). In short “compromise”. Don’t demand too much. Wink just a little at evil and people will follow you. But Jesus slammed down the tempter’s enticement. There can never be compromises with evil. Evil cannot be defeated by compromising with evil.

Finally, remember one very important thing. Temptation often comes not at our strongest, but at our weakest moments, that is, when we are at the limits of our patience or kindness, when we are under pressure. So be on guard. Our Lord’s temptation began “after” 40 days of fasting.

We have just entered the season of Lent. Lent is a special occasion which calls us to deep decision-making. It challenges us to test our fidelity to God and to rise above our human weaknesses.

Short Prayer: Heavenly Father, during this season of Lent, speak Your words of covenant love to us. By Your Spirit, help us to trust more fully in You so that, like Your Son Jesus, we would be heralds of Your Kingdom on earth. Amen.

41 posted on 02/22/2015 2:42:49 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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Marriage=One Man and One Woman 'Til Death Do Us Part

Daily Marriage Tip for February 22, 2015:

“He remained in the desert for forty days, tempted by Satan.” (Mk 1:13) There are many temptations that surround us daily. When faced with an evil temptation, turn to God and He will lead. Encourage your spouse to also avoid temptation.

42 posted on 02/22/2015 2:57:43 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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Sunday Scripture Study

First Sunday of Lent - Cycle  B

February 22, 2015

Click here for USCCB readings

Opening Prayer  

First Reading: Genesis 9:8-15

Psalm: 25:4-9

Second Reading: 1 Peter 3:18-22

Gospel Reading: Mark 1:12-15

 

QUESTIONS:

Closing Prayer

Catechism of the Catholic Church:  §§ 362, 374-79, 396-411, 538-40, 1427-39, 2043, 2846-49

It is necessary that temptations should happen; for who shall be crowned but he that shall lawfully have fought, and how shall a man fight if there be none to attack him?  --St. Bernard

43 posted on 02/22/2015 3:02:50 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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Reflections from Scott Hahn

The New Creation: Scott Hahn Reflects on the First Sunday of Lent

Posted by Dr. Scott Hahn on 02.20.15 |

Jesus Tempted Mark 1:12

Readings:
Genesis 9:8-15
Psalm 25:4-9
1 Peter 3:18-22
Mark 1:12-15

Lent bids us to return to the innocence of baptism. As Noah and his family were saved through the waters of the deluge, we were saved through the waters of baptism, Peter reminds us in today’s Epistle.

And God’s covenant with Noah in today’s First Reading marked the start of a new world. But it also prefigured a new and greater covenant between God and His creation (see Hosea 2:20; Isaiah 11:1-9).

We see that new covenant and that new creation begin in today’s Gospel.

Jesus is portrayed as the new Adam - the beloved son of God (see Mark 1:11; Luke 3:38), living in harmony with the wild beasts (see Genesis 2:19-20), being served by angels (see Ezekiel 28:12-14).

Like Adam, He too is tempted by the devil. But while Adam fell, giving reign to sin and death (see Romans 5:12-14, 17-20), Jesus is victorious.

This is the good news, the “gospel of God” that He proclaims. Through His death, resurrection, and enthronement at the right hand of the Father, the world is once again made God’s kingdom.

In the waters of baptism, each of us entered the kingdom of His beloved Son (see Colossians 1:13-14). We were made children of God, new creations (see 2 Corinthians 5:7; Galatians 4:3-7).

But like Jesus, and Israel before Him, we have passed through the baptismal waters only to be driven into the wilderness - a world filled with afflictions and tests of our faithfulness (see 1 Corinthians 10:1-4, 9,13; Deuteronomy 8:2,16).

We are led on this journey by Jesus. He is the Savior - the way and the truth we sing of in today’s Psalm (see John 14:6). He feeds us with the bread of angels (see Psalm 78:25; Wisdom 16:20), and cleanses our consciences in the sacrament of reconciliation.

As we begin this holy season, let us renew our baptismal vows - to repent and believe the gospel.


44 posted on 02/22/2015 3:38:07 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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First Sunday of Lent" The Tempter Approaches Jesus

 

The Word for Sunday: http://usccb.org/bible/readings/022215.cfm


It is clear that the source of our temptations to sin come primarily from three sources: the world, the flesh and the devil.  Among the three two are good and one is evil.  I hope I don't have to explain which is which.  While the world is good as God created it, it may also become a source of temptation for all that it offers to us.

The flesh and all material things are likewise a good.  But the lure of immediate gratification and power and prestige are subtle and at times very difficult to resist.

However, the one that is evil may indeed present itself as a good - a counterfeit of a good which therefore has no value like counterfeit money. St. Ignatius of Loyola famously wrote in his spiritual exercises that "the devil comes cloaked as an angel of light" for those who are serious about pursuing a deeper spiritual life.  So, to know what is of God and what is not is essential.

The Gospel for the First Sunday of Lent is always the story of Jesus' temptation in the desert.  This Sunday we have Marks version which is nothing more than a mention. As Mark writes: "The Spirit drove Jesus out into the desert, and he remained in the desert for forty days, tempted by Satan.  He was among wild beasts, and the angels ministered to him." (Mk 1: 12-13).  That's all we know according to Mark. 

We are more familiar with the events related in Luke and Matthew:  (Lk 4: 1 - 13, Mt 4: 1-1) which expands more on the specific temptations Jesus encountered in the barren landscape.  That of the senses, pride, and power. The Judean desert in which Jesus found himself is wild, lifeless, filled with rocks and dangerous crawly things.  We can only imagine what it was like 2,000 years ago. 

In his book, Interview with an Exorcist, Fr. Jose Fortea a well known exorcist speaks of the temptations of Jesus in the desert as following a "subtle logic" on the part of the tempter.  The devil begins with a temptation of the senses, the bodily appetites (bread) as Jesus is hungry. 

Having resisted that, the tempter moves to a more challenging level as he tempts "with the world." Jesus has rejected earthly power and prestige in favor of embracing his mission and his Father's will so the world becomes more attractive when one attempts to leave it behind. 

Fr. Fortea writes as if the devil was speaking to Jesus in this second temptation: "Make a sign of acknowledgment toward me, proud as I am, and, as a reward, I will put myself at your side . . . I will help you in your work of saving souls.  Are you not humble?" As Fr. Fortea says, "It is the temptation to do a little evil so as to achieve a great good." 

Having resisted again, Jesus encounters the final temptation of pride - to be publicly recognized.  Fortea says, "Here the devil was saying, 'Even though God decides the time and the moment, why not bring the moment forward . . . by coming out into the light in a glorious and spectacular way?'"  This is the "most complex and subtle of all." 

If we study the above well, it should lead us to see the progressing of our own temptations.  There is nothing to fear as God is greater than the angels he created and those who fell from glory, though his enemy and ours, are already defeated. 

During this season of Lent it is spiritually healthy for us to reflect on the reality of temptation, our own choices and how we respond in this spiritual battle.  It is a graced time to strengthen our prayer life, to actively take part in charitable works, to become more aware of our "soft" spots and to make them strong through active self-denial. 

Is this easy?  No and if it was what kind of sacrifice would that be? Through God's grace and our humble and sincere efforts this Lent will not be burdensome but a source of renewal. 

A well known prayer by Pope Leo XIII:

St. Michael the Archangel,

defend us in battle.

Be our protection against the

wickedness and snares of the devil.

May God rebuke him, we humbly pray;

and do thou, O Prince of the Heavenly

Host,

by the divine power of God,

cast into hell, Satan and all the evil spirits,

 who roam throughout the world,

seeking the ruin of souls.

Amen   

 

Fr. Tim

45 posted on 02/22/2015 4:18:09 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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Regnum Christi

Temptation’s Hour
U. S. A. | SPIRITUAL LIFE | SPIRITUALITY
February 22, 2015. First Sunday of Lent


By Father Robert Presutti, LC

Mark 1:12-15

The Spirit drove Jesus out into the desert, and he remained in the desert for 40 days, tempted by Satan. He was among wild beasts, and the angels ministered to him. After John had been arrested, Jesus came to Galilee proclaiming the Gospel of God: "This is the time of fulfillment. The kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe in the Gospel."

Introductory Prayer: Lord Jesus, I believe that you are leading me and that when I go astray it’s because I take my eyes off you and cease to follow you. I know that you will never abandon me. Thank you for your unconditional and restoring love. I place all my trust in you, and I long to love you in return with all my mind, heart soul and strength.

Petition: Lord Jesus, help me to be steadfast in moments of temptation.

1. The Role of Temptation Jesus’ public life begins by a duel with Satan: Before working any miracles, before speaking any parables, before gathering any disciples, the Lord makes clear what his life and mission are to be about: they are to destroy the works of the devil and establish the kingdom of grace. To do this, Jesus confronts Satan’s greatest weapon against the human person: temptation. Satan seduces the human spirit into a life of sin, which involves focusing on oneself. Jesus meets the devil on his own terrain and — in the face of mysterious temptation — remains focused on the Father and his will. Temptation plays an important role in the plan of redemption. It helps us define ourselves: directing our lives either toward God by embracing grace or toward sin by turning in on oneself.

2. Wild Beasts and Angels: We bear within ourselves the potential to become either saints or sinners.  No one’s fate is predetermined. Even the angels had to make a free choice of good or evil and, by this choice, forge their personal destinies. The love and dedication of the angels that chose the good made them faithful instruments of God’s will and plan. The vicious self-centeredness of the demons made them into ravenous beasts endlessly looking for someone to devour. Our person and our most intimate, most secret choices are part of this ongoing and cosmic struggle between good and evil. The hour of temptation is the hour of both choice and decision. The stronger the temptation, the stronger the decision must be. A repeated choice for a good decision makes a habit of good. Many good habits build a good character. A good character, open to God’s grace, is holiness.

3. We need to Take a Position: Here and Now Christ’s appearance in Galilee was marked by a call to decision. No one remains indifferent before Jesus Christ; no one hears his message without some sort of subsequent decision. Jesus calls all men and women to his kingdom, and this call constantly brings people to choose either to draw ever closer to him, or to pull further away. The best time to choose is always now, and the best place is always here. If not now, when? If not here, then where?

Conversation with Christ: Lord Jesus, I want always to choose you, but I know that I am weak. Please give me strength in my hour of temptation. Please keep me steady, and inflame my heart with love so that I choose you and your ways even though it’s costly. May the temptations I overcome become the stepping-stones to a holy life.

Resolution: I will be attentive today to the subtle ways in which I am tempted to center my life around myself. When these temptations come, I firmly commit to following Christ instead of my own selfish path.


46 posted on 02/22/2015 4:53:20 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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The Wonder of the Rainbow & the Rainbow-Maker

shutterstock_96279167 

February 22, 2015
First Reading: Genesis 9:8-15
http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/022215.cfm

There is something divine about a rainbow. When you look up in the sky and see a multicolored arc looking back at you, the child inside is smitten with wonder. A question arises – Is it all true? Are all the stories I believed actually real? Do I really live in a world of wonder, of beauty, of adventure? A rainbow gives us hope that life really isn’t just about death and taxes, but much, much more. It is a clue to the meaning of the universe and where we stand within it.

Noah’s Covenant

After the disastrous Flood, Noah worships God with sacrificial offerings. In a repeat of the Creation story earlier in Genesis, God blesses Noah and commands him to “be fruitful and multiply” (Gen 9:1). Humanity gets a second chance. After having fallen into error and rebellion, God wipes the slate clean and offers us a new opportunity. As part of that re-creation, he establishes a new covenant with Noah and promises that he will never again destroy the world by flood. This new covenant is unconditional. God has seen that “the imagination of man’s heart is evil from his youth” (Gen 8:21 RSV), and so has decided to keep the race going in spite of itself. Our first parents sinned, and their children, and their children. God knew it would happen, but he allows the history of sin to unfold in order that he might bring us redemption. We couldn’t handle the freedom he granted us from the beginning.

A Rainbow to Remember

As a sign of his new promise, his new covenant with Noah and all his descendants, which encompasses humanity, the Lord grants Noah a beautiful rainbow. The rainbow serves as a reminder, a celestial Post-It note for God to remember his promise not to send another devastating Flood. The rainbow in biblical symbolism is not just an optical phenomenon, but part of God’s personal armament.

God’s Rainbow Weapon

When God establishes peace with Noah by putting his rainbow in the sky, we get a vague sense of cessation of hostility, but other biblical passages clue us in to the idea that the rainbow is God’s bow for shooting arrows of lightening, clarifying the peace-treaty nature of the covenant. Thus Habbakuk:

Thou didst strip the sheath from thy bow,
and put the arrows to the string.
Thou didst cleave the earth with rivers.
The mountains saw thee, and writhed;
the raging waters swept on;
the deep gave forth its voice,
it lifted its hands on high.

The sun and moon stood still in their habitation
 at the light of thine arrows as they sped,
at the flash of thy glittering spear.
(Hab 3:9-11 RSV)

When God hangs up his bow in the sky (Gen 9:13), he is putting away the “weapon” he used to rain down the thunderstorm waters of the Flood. Just in case you have any doubts about whether rainbows can be weaponized by a divine being, Psalm 7 insists:

If a man does not repent, God will whet his sword;
he has bent and strung his bow;
he has prepared his deadly weapons,
making his arrows fiery shafts.
(Psa 7:12-13 RSV)

The “fiery shafts” are not flaming arrows, but lightning bolts shot from the sky. The idea of the rainbow being a weapon of the gods is also found in the Enuma Elish, a Babylonian epic, in which the god Marduk slays another divinity and then puts his bow in the sky as a constellation.

The Wonder of the Rainbow

Rainbows are the most improbable things. While they follow the laws of optics, they are unusually spectacular to sight in the sky. The light from the sun reflects off the back of spherical raindrops and refracts—changes direction—through the drop. The light “turns” toward us at an angle of about 42°. The white light of the sun is separated out into its many individual colors since the refraction differs based on the wavelengths of light. The raindrops act as tiny prisms, separating out the many colors hidden within sunlight. Depending on the optics at work, you might get to see a double rainbow, a full circle rainbow (usually from an airplane), a monochrome rainbow at sunset or even a moonbow (caused by moonlight).

Rainbows are Personal

What strikes me as especially significant in the science of rainbows is that every rainbow is personal. That is, no two observers see the exact same rainbow since the appearance of the bow depends on the standpoint of the observer. In the same way that no two people see the exact same thing in a mirror, the reflected and refracted light coming from the raindrops arrives on an individual basis. If conditions are right, it can even feel like a rainbow is stalking you, following your every move, since as you shift positions, you see new rainbows from every new point of observation. The rainbow reminds us that we inhabit a reality far greater than ourselves and yet that reality is disclosed to each of us in a uniquely personal way.

Praising the Rainbow-Maker

God offers the rainbow to Noah as a sign of his oath. It is a reminder of God’s faithfulness to his promises, a sign of hope, a wonder-inducing sight of awe. The rainbow is meant to inspire us, to push us past the humdrum of everyday life to remember how amazing it is that God created us in the first place, that he allows us to inhabit his creation, that he preserves us from day to day, and even offers us his friendship. The rainbow should prompt our hearts to praise the God who gave it to us, as Sirach encourages us:

Look upon the rainbow, and praise him who made it,
exceedingly beautiful in its brightness.
It encircles the heaven with its glorious arc;
the hands of the Most High have stretched it out.
(Sir 43:11-12 RSV)


47 posted on 02/22/2015 5:04:13 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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Scripture Speaks: “Repent, believe in the Gospel”

Duccio_-_The_Temptation_on_the_Mount 

Today, we hear Jesus announce the familiar call of the Church during Lent: “Repent, and believe in the Gospel.”

Gospel (Read Mk 1:12-15)

In one of the lectionary’s shortest Gospel readings, St. Mark describes the beginning of Jesus’ public ministry. Right after His baptism by John in the Jordan, “the Spirit drove Jesus out into the desert, and He remained in the desert for forty days, tempted by Satan.” St. Mark, unlike the other evangelists, doesn’t give us details of the temptation. His focus is on the forty days and on Jesus’ contact with both fallen and ministering angels. Why is it important to know that this was a forty-day event?

To the Jews, the number forty had a long association with times of testing and probation for God’s people. In the days of Noah, when “the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually” (Gen. 6:5), He sent a rain that flooded the earth for forty days and nights. The Flood was a judgment on the rampant wickedness that had spread through the earth, but it was also a time of grace, in which God preserved life, both of humans and animals, through the righteousness of one man, Noah. Later, when God delivered His people from bondage in Egypt and made a covenant with them at Mt. Sinai, He tested them by keeping Moses in a fiery cloud on the top of the mountain for forty days and nights, leaving them without a visible leader (see Ex. 24:18). They failed that test, creating for themselves a golden calf, a god they could see. However, God had mercy on them, through Moses’ intervention, and He agreed to continue with them on their journey to the Promised Land. As penance for the sin of the people, Moses fasted forty days and nights on Mt. Sinai, as he waited for God to write His commandments on stone tablets for a second time (see Ex 24:28). When the Israelites finally arrived at the border of Canaan, they refused to go in to possess the land; they were not willing to trust God for the conquest. God gave them what they wanted, so the people wandered in the wilderness for forty years as the rebellious generation died off. It took that long to purify the nation of its hard-heartedness.

Even just this brief (and not complete) history of the number forty in the Old Testament helps us see that when St. Mark tells us simply that Jesus was in the desert for forty days, he was saying quite a lot. When he tells us further that Jesus was “tempted by Satan,” we understand that Jesus entered into what many others in the history of man had faced without success. Certainly the nation of Israel, God’s chosen people, had not been able to resist the Tempter’s call to disobedience and covenant unfaithfulness. Their long history proved that. For Jesus to follow the Spirit into the desert and face down Satan meant He was the true Israel, the righteous “first-born” of God, as Israel was frequently called in Scripture (see Ex 4:22). Jesus did for them what they could not do for themselves.

Notice that St. Mark also tells us, “He was among wild beasts, and the angels ministered to Him.” This description takes us all the way back to Adam in Eden, who named all the animals and lived among them. He was the first victim of Satan’s seduction. Adam’s original love of God, given to him at Creation, had to be tested in order for it to be truly his own. His probation ended in original sin; angels drove him out of Eden and blocked the way back in. So, Jesus in the desert for forty days, resisting Satan without capitulation, becomes the true Adam, doing for all mankind what we cannot do for ourselves. As a result, angels ministered to Him—a tender reversal of the Fall.

At His baptism, Jesus had publicly identified Himself as a man living in a fallen world, like all of us. His immediate battle with man’s great enemy, Satan, prepared Him to fight to the end, even to death on a Cross. That is why, when John the Baptist’s public ministry ended with imprisonment, Jesus was ready to announce, “This is the time of fulfillment. The kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe the Gospel.”

Possible response: Lord Jesus, I am so thankful You are well-acquainted with temptation. Help me remember that about You.

First Reading (Read Gen 9:8-15)

In these verses, we find the words God spoke to Noah after the Flood ended, and Noah was once again on dry land. The great purification of the earth through water had taken place. There had been much death, of both men and beasts, but there had also been a kind of rebirth and renewal. In particular, we see how God desired to establish a covenant with Noah, his descendants, and “every living creature.” God promised never to repeat the Flood: “There shall not be another flood to devastate the earth.” As a sign of this promise, God set the rainbow in the sky. In this beautiful element appearing in nature, we can see the first outline of sacramental grace. God associates Himself and His love with a concrete, tangible reality. When men see it, God Himself will act, which is pure grace: “I will recall the covenant I have made between Me and you and all living beings.” We understand that a sacrament is also a guaranteed encounter with Jesus, in which His life flows into us, by means of water, oil, bread, wine, etc. Pure grace.

The great value of reading this passage on the first Sunday in Lent, which is our own forty days of purgation and purification, is that it vividly reminds us that times of testing and trial have a purpose, a goal. We can see God’s eagerness to establish Noah within the safety and provision of His covenant, once the Flood had ended. So it is with us. The journey through Lent leads us to the joy of Easter, to the victory of the New Covenant. We might wonder why God promised never to purge the earth with another flood. Didn’t great wickedness appear again on the earth, even in Noah’s own day? Did the Flood really work? It certainly worked to teach the world that wickedness must eventually be judged. However, it would take a different kind of “bath” to wash the human heart clean of sin. God would never need to send another Flood, because it had already served its purpose, pointing beyond itself to the waters that would definitively wash the earth clean—baptism, the water of new life.

Possible response: Heavenly Father, please help me keep the goal of covenant joy with You ahead of me in my Lenten journey this year.

Psalm (Read Ps 25:4-9)

This psalm is an excellent Lenten prayer, because it is a simple plea for God to teach and guide us, creating in us open hearts. When we think about the story of man, beginning with Adam and all through Israel’s history, we see it as a story of man’s struggle to obey God, to keep covenant with Him. Jesus came to heal us and make us able to obey. So, now, we can, in all sincerity, pray: “Your ways, O LORD, make known to me; teach me Your paths.” This can become our heart’s desire in Lent. In the simplicity of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving, we seek to cut away distractions and burdens that harden our hearts and make us dull to God’s love. The psalmist knows that God’s compassion and love “are from old.” He has ever been bending down to be kind and good to us. In Lent, we can confess with the psalmist: “Your ways, O Lord, are love and truth to those who keep Your covenant.”

Possible response: The psalm is, itself, a response to our other readings. Read it again prayerfully to make it your own.

Second Reading (Read 1 Pet 3:18-22)

This passage contains two verses that have baffled exegetes for centuries, and the debate about their meaning has not been definitively resolved. The danger for us is to bog down and miss the reading’s main message and its connections to the other readings. Let’s try to avoid that.

St. Peter tells us, “Christ suffered for sins once, the righteous for the unrighteous, that He might lead you to God.” This summarizes all of salvation history—all the failed testings and probations of all men, from Adam to now, have been overcome in Christ’s suffering and obedience on our behalf. Jesus’ death and Resurrection have powerfully accomplished God’s loving will for man.

The difficulty comes in vss. 19-20. We do not have the space to examine the many different interpretations that have appeared over the years in which Christians have read them. The most recent scholarship suggests that the verses describe Jesus’ descent into Hades, the abode of the dead. He went there to liberate those who had sought to live righteously and died before His appearance within history. The text says He “preached to the spirits in prison, who had once been disobedient while God patiently waited in the days of Noah.” These “spirits” are not the unrighteous (because there is no opportunity for repentance after death). Instead, according to Jewish tradition in Jesus’ day, they refer to fallen angels who tempted and tormented mankind in Noah’s day. It was thought that, being angels, the Flood could not destroy them, so they were shackled in Hades, awaiting their fate. When Jesus descended into Hades on Holy Saturday, “in addition to liberating the righteous dead of the Old Testament for entrance into Heaven, He also proclaimed (“preached”) Himself Conqueror of evil to the infernal spirits whose power had just been shattered by His redeeming death.” (Ignatius Catholic Study Bible, pg 456)

The real thrust of this passage, however, is to help us see that the Flood was a foreshadowing of baptism, by which we can have a “clear conscience” before God. The obedience of Jesus has won this for us. In Lent, we aim to enter more fully into this gift of life to us. Once, Jesus did battle with a fierce, hateful enemy. Now, He has “gone into heaven and is at the right hand of God, with angels, authorities, and powers subject to Him.”

King Jesus, lead Your Church through this Lent to the victory of Easter.

Possible response: Lord Jesus, please open my eyes during this Lent to the ways the Enemy subtly tries to shackle me to himself.


48 posted on 02/22/2015 5:09:31 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Salvation

I always found it interesting that the purpose of the rainbow was for God to remember.....................

Gen 9:16 And the rainbow shall be in the cloud. And I will look upon it that I may remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is upon the earth.


49 posted on 02/22/2015 5:33:25 PM PST by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: PeterPrinciple

*8And I will look upon it that I may remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is upon the earth.**

Not to destroy the earth with water again.


50 posted on 02/22/2015 5:49:45 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
One Bread, One Body

One Bread, One Body

Language: English | Español

All Issues > Volume 31, Issue 2

<< Sunday, February 22, 2015 >> First Sunday of Lent
 
Genesis 9:8-15
1 Peter 3:18-22

View Readings
Psalm 25:4-9
Mark 1:12-15

Similar Reflections
 

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

 
"He stayed in the wasteland forty days...He was with the wild beasts." —Mark 1:13
 

Mark's Gospel was written around 70 A.D., and is believed to have been written in Rome. At that time in Rome, it was not uncommon for Christians to be thrown into an arena with hungry wild beasts, such as lions and tigers, to be martyred by being devoured by them.

Can you imagine how the early Christians of Rome must have been encouraged to hear that Jesus dwelt in safety among the wild beasts? (Mk 1:13) Jesus not only survived being in the presence of the wild beasts, but apparently lived in peace with them. The prophet Isaiah announced that in Jesus the wild beasts will likewise live in peace with all creation (see Is 11:6-8). The Lord in His power can shut the jaws of the wild beasts to protect His holy ones (Dn 6:23). In fact, in Daniel's case, the wild beasts eventually destroyed the human beasts (Dn 6:25).

Today we're always facing the wild beasts of the godless secular culture, economic tyranny, government attacks on religious freedom, and so on. Satan is prowling around like a roaring lion, that is, a wild beast, looking for someone to devour (1 Pt 5:8).

When Jesus was with the wild beasts, He was not alone. The Spirit was with Him, and angels of God ministered to Him (Mk 1:12-13). The Lord can save us from the jaws of the wild beasts, human, animal, or spiritual (see 2 Tm 4:17). Nothing, not even wild beasts, can separate us from the love of Jesus (Rm 8:39).

 
Prayer: "In God I trust without fear; what can flesh do against me?" (Ps 56:12)
Promise: "Good and upright is the Lord; thus He shows sinners the way." —Ps 25:8
Praise: Praise You, risen Jesus! Your first act after You rose from the dead was to offer Your disciples peace and reconciliation (Jn 20:19, 23). Praise You, Jesus, "rich in mercy" (Eph 2:4).

51 posted on 02/22/2015 5:55:46 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All

Just forming....anyone think it's not a baby? Pray to end abortion.

52 posted on 02/22/2015 5:57:33 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All
Insight Scoop

The First Sunday of Lent: Deluges and Deserts, Sin and Salvation

http://www.catholicworldreport.com/Content/Site140/Blog/3710christtempt_00000003056.jpg

Detail from "Temptation of Christ" (1872) by Vasily Surikov (WikiArt.org)

A Scriptural Reflection on the Readings for Sunday, February 22, 2015, the First Sunday of Lent | Carl E. Olson

Readings:
Gn 9:8-15
Ps 25:4-5, 6-7, 8-9
1 Pt 3:18-22
Mk 1:12-15

Lent is a season of challenges and extremes, a dramatic confluence of opposites. As evidence, I offer Exhibit A: today’s readings, which contain stories about deluges and deserts, sin and salvation, and water that destroys—and saves. All of it is heady stuff, certainly, but it is aimed at the heart, meant to help us embrace more tightly and cherish more deeply the eternal purpose of our lives.

What does the story of the flood and Noah’s ark have to do with Jesus being tempted in the desert? The first connection is sin. The flood was necessary because “In the eyes of God the earth was corrupt and full of lawlessness” (Gen 6:11). Seeing the corruption and depravity of man, God told Noah, “I have decided to put an end to all mortals on earth; the earth is full of lawlessness because of them. So I will destroy them and all life on earth” (Gen 6:13). Although Jesus was sinless, he saw and felt the effects of sin. After being baptized, he went into the desert to directly confront the temptations of Satan, the Evil One responsible for bringing sin and death into the world.

This brings us to the second connection, which is a time of trial. The destruction of wickedness on earth, God told Noah, would require forty days and nights of rain (Gen 7:4, 12). That number, in both the Old and New Testaments, is closely connected with times of trial, hardship, and punishment, including the forty years the Israelites spent in the wilderness after the Exodus, made necessary by their sin and rebellion (Num 14:26-35).

The forty days spent by Jesus in the desert was a reenactment of those forty years. But while the people had failed to obey the word of God, Jesus obeyed completely. Whereas they had continually complained, Jesus complied with humility. And while Moses was not allowed to enter the Promised Land, Jesus ushered in the Kingdom of God.

The third connection is covenant. Following the flood, as we hear in today’s Old Testament reading, God told Noah that he was establishing a covenant “between me and you” and “between me and the earth.” This was one of several covenants, each of them an invitation from the loving Creator for man to enter into “intimate communion” with him (Catechism of the Catholic Church, pars 54-73). The new and everlasting covenant, the perfect culmination of this plan of salvation, was established by the life, death, and resurrection of the God-man.

Finally, there is the connection of water and baptism. In the time of Noah, sinful men were destroyed by water even while the righteous man (and his family) was saved by that same water. In baptism, as today’s epistle explains, the flesh—that is, the old man—is put to death, while a new man emerges from the sacramental waters. “For Christ, being the first-born of every creature,” wrote Justin Martyr in his Dialogue with Trypho, “became again the chief of another race regenerated by Himself through water, and faith, and wood, containing the mystery of the cross; even as Noah was saved by wood when he rode over the waters with his household.”

Jesus, after being baptized—and thus preparing the waters of the world for our baptisms—faced the Tempter and then announced the Kingdom of God. In doing so, he proclaimed, in word and deed, that sin and wickedness would be dealt a fatal blow, which was soon delivered through his own suffering, death, and triumphant emergence from the tomb.

During his time in the desert, Jesus prayed and fasted. Pope Benedict XVI, in his [2009] message for Lent, reminded us that the true fast is “directed to eating the ‘true food’, which is to do the Father’s will (cf. Jn 4:34).” Noah was saved because he chose holiness over earthly pleasures. Jesus brought salvation by choosing the Father’s will over the devil’s lies. The challenge of Lent is to choose holiness and hunger for the true food.

(This "Opening the Word" column originally appeared in the March 1, 2009, edition of Our Sunday Visitor newspaper.)


53 posted on 02/23/2015 6:30:38 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: All

http://resources.sainteds.com/showmedia.asp?media=../sermons/homily/2015-02-22-Homily%20Fr%20Gary.mp3&ExtraInfo=0&BaseDir=../sermons/homily


54 posted on 03/01/2015 6:43:00 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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