Weekly Reflections

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Second Sunday in Lent, March 13, 2022

Transfiguration event for the Apostles and for us

Gospel: Luke 9:28b–36
This is my chosen Son; listen to him.

We who live now, in the time of the Holy Spirit and the church, can hope to participate in the glory previewed in the transfiguration of Jesus. In writing to the Philippians, Paul reminds them and us that at the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ “our lowly body” will be conformed with “his glorified body.”

Transfiguration event for the Apostles and for us

Luke 9:28b–36

About eight days after he said this, he took Peter, John, and James and went up the mountain to pray.

While he was praying his face changed in appearance and his clothing became dazzling white.

And behold, two men were conversing with him, Moses and Elijah, who appeared in glory and spoke of his exodus that he was going to accomplish in Jerusalem.

Peter and his companions had been overcome by sleep, but becoming fully awake, they saw his glory and the two men standing with him.

As they were about to part from him, Peter said to Jesus, “Master, it is good that we are here; let us make three tents, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.” But he did not know what he was saying.

While he was still speaking, a cloud came and cast a shadow over them, and they became frightened when they entered the cloud.

Then from the cloud came a voice that said, “This is my chosen Son; listen to him.”

After the voice had spoken, Jesus was found alone. They fell silent and did not at that time tell anyone what they had seen.

Note:

The event takes place in Luke after Jesus’ sermon on the plain, and after a couple of chapters of both healings and criticisms, and some parabolic teaching. Chapter 9 begins with Jesus commissioning the twelve and sending them out to spread the good news. It continues with the return of the apostles and the miracle of the loaves and fishes, and leads up to the transfiguration with the first prophecy of the passion. Jesus’ last words eight days before the transfiguration were: I tell you truly, there are some standing here who will not taste death before they see the kingdom of God.

Music Meditations

  • How Great Thou Art sung by Chris Rice
  • The Ground by O. Gjeilo sung by Phoenix Chorale
  • The Lord is my light, my Help my Salvation (Psalm 27) Christopher Walker
  • Yahweh I Know You Are Near—Christian Song

Opening Prayer

From Sacred Space, a service of the Irish Jesuits:

Jesus, how often have our eyes been closed in sleep as we walk with you through life? How often are our ears closed to the Word you speak to us through our daily conversations? May your word become awake, alive and active in us as we travel the road together with you. All we do our whole lives long is go from one little piece of holy ground to the next. Lord, give us the strength to keep going in between.

Companions for the Journey

This is a short writing from one of the Christian or non-Christian witnesses of our tradition—a person who embodies the theme of the gospel we are studying today.

This commentary, from “America”, the national Jesuit weekly, is by Daniel J. Harrington, S.J., professor of New Testament at Weston Jesuit School of Theology in Cambridge, Mass.

The distinctive way in which Luke tells the story of the transfiguration highlights his perception of Jesus’ identity as the prophet of God par excellence and adds to his picture of the time of Jesus as the center of salvation history.

First, a prophet speaks for God and so must be close to God. At this decisive moment in Jesus’ public ministry, Luke notes that Jesus went up to a mountain to pray. Indeed, at most of the pivotal moments in Jesus’ career, Luke notes that he was at prayer. The source of Jesus’ prophetic ministry is the Holy Spirit, and his relationship with the Father is fostered through prayer.

Second, Jesus stands in the tradition of the prophets of old. That is why Moses (representing the law) and Elijah (representing the prophets) appear in the narrative. Moses was God’s spokesman, and God had promised to raise up another prophet like Moses (Deut 18:15, 18). Elijah had spoken on God’s behalf and did signs and wonders, as Jesus would also do. And in some Jewish circles Elijah was expected to return from heaven as a preliminary to the revelation of God’s Messiah.

Third, Jesus and the two prophets speak about Jesus’ immediate future. According to Luke, they were discussing “his exodus that he was going to accomplish in Jerusalem.” That clearly refers to Jesus’ suffering and death. But by using the word exodus, Luke alludes to Israel’s passage from slavery to freedom under Moses and suggests that Jesus’ passion and death will lead to his exaltation (resurrection and ascension) and to the possibility of freedom and right relationship with God for us all.

Fourth, it is the fate of prophets to be misunderstood and rejected. In this case, Jesus the prophet is misunderstood by his own disciple, Peter. As his suggestion to build three tents for the prophets reveals, Peter mistakenly identifies the present experience of Jesus’ glory in the transfiguration with the fullness of God’s kingdom. In doing so Peter wants to prolong the experience of glory and to bypass the suffering associated with the mystery of the cross. Finally, the heavenly voice identifies Jesus as “my chosen Son,” and says, “Listen to him.” The admonition to listen to Jesus as God’s prophet echoes the directive in the promise of the new prophet like Moses in Deuteronomy 18.

The identity of Jesus the prophet of God and the Holy Spirit are inextricably linked. Jesus the prophet is led by the Spirit. Indeed, during Jesus’ public ministry, the power of the Spirit is focused on Jesus. Where Jesus is, there is the Holy Spirit. Through Jesus’ life, death and resurrection the Holy Spirit has been made available to us all, and so we form a prophetic, Spirit-led community of faith. As the church of Jesus Christ, we are led by the Holy Spirit and so constitute the people of God.

We who live now, in the time of the Holy Spirit and the church, can hope to participate in the glory previewed in the transfiguration of Jesus. In writing to the Philippians, Paul reminds them and us that at the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ “our lowly body” will be conformed with “his glorified body.” In the meantime we are to recognize that although “our citizenship is in heaven,” our task in the present is to “stand firm in the Lord.”

Read another reflection on the Transfiguration of Jesus >>

Weekly Memorization

Taken from the gospel for today’s session…

This is my chosen Son; listen to him.

Living the Good News

What action can you take in the next week as a response to today’s reading and discussion?

Keep a private journal of your prayer/actions responses this week. Feel free to use the personal reflection questions or the meditations which follow:

Reflection Questions

  • Where would you go to be alone with God?
  • Have you ever had an experience that changed your outlook on life for the good?
    Did you see God’s hand in that experience?
  • From Sacred Space:
    Have you ever seen one you love in their full dignity?
    Can you think of such a moment?
  • When is a person transfigured?
    When the hidden potential of a person comes to light?
    Or when we are transfigured enough to see the hidden potential in another or in a given life situation?
  • What is the role of prayer in making us aware of God’s presence in our lives?
    Which prayers work best for me?
    Which types of prayers get in the way?
  • Have I ever experienced events that impacted MY relationship with God?
    Was I always aware of the significance of these events at the time?
  • What does the Transfiguration suggest to me about how God might be trying to be present to me?
    Am I ready for the change in my life that might result from such an experience?
  • Have there been any “God moments” in my life? Did they change me in any way?
  • I look back on the last several days. Have I seen the spark of divinity in myself or in others?
    Did I notice it at the time, or only realize its import after the fact?
  • Can I cultivate a special way of seeing, to go beneath the surface of my daily life and see the Holy that resides between the routine and the sameness?
    How much of my life is on autopilot?
    Is there so much noise and rush in my life that I have no time for prayer and reflection?
    Was God ever “here” and I missed it?
    How can I be more attentive to the still, small voice of God in my life?
  • Has there ever been a time when I experienced a personal transformation or transfiguration?
    Have I ever had a “mountain top” experience when I felt God was close and spoke a word to me?
    What effect did that experience have on my life?
  • Have I ever been like Peter, wanting to prolong the glorious moment and trying to ignore the very real outcome of this experience?
  • What did I learn about myself in “low” (as opposed to mountaintop) experiences?
  • Is the Spirit of God (the Holy Spirit) present in my life?

Meditations

A Meditation in the Franciscan Style/Action:

This writing from Oscar Romero (found in Lent, A Sourcebook for Forty Days, by Liturgy Training Publications) could very easily apply to the world in which we are living right now, with the tragedy in Ukraine, the displacement and hunger of those peoples and others affected by climate change and by poverty that is the result of unjust economic systems. How is your Lent awakening your sense of social justice and concern for the poor and war-torn?:

This Lent, which we observe amidst blood and sorrow, ought to presage a transfiguration of our people, a resurrection of our nation. The church invites us to a modern form of penance, of fasting and prayer, perennial Christian practices, by adapted to the circumstances of each person.

Lenten fasting is not the same thing in those lands where people eat well as is a Lent among our third World peoples, undernourished as they are, living in a perpetual Lent, always fasting. For those who eat well, Lent is a call to austerity, a call to give away in order to share with those in need. But in poor lands, in homes where there is hunger, Lent should be observed in order to give to the sacrifice that is every day life the meaning of the cross.

But it should not be out of a mistaken sense of resignation. God does not want that. Rather, feeling in one’s own flesh the consequences of sin and injustice, one is stimulated to work for social justice and a genuine love of the poor. Our Lent should awaken a sense of social justice.

A Meditation in the Dominican Style/Asking Questions:

Lent is, for many of us, a “time on the mountain” where we pray, disengage a little from the world and purify ourselves to live as better human beings. But these readings suggest that we, like Jesus and the disciples, need to come down from that mountain at some point and tend to the needs of a wounded people and a broken world. Spend some time thinking about the tension between contemplation and action that we all experience. Which do you prefer? Is there a way for you to achieve some balance between the two? Make some specific resolutions to follow during the Lenten season.

A Meditation in the Ignatian Style/Imagination:

Imagine that you are one of the disciples on that mountaintop with Jesus. Try to picture in your mind the amazing scene that must have occurred. How do you feel about what you are experiencing? What does it tell you about Jesus? What would your first words to Jesus have been? Have you ever had an experience in which you suddenly saw someone very familiar to you, say a friend or a relative, in a very different and exalted way? How did you feel—awestruck? Proud? Jealous? Bored? Would the disciples feel any differently about their friend? What are they missing here? What lesson is there in this experience for you?

A Meditation in the Augustinian Style/Relationship:

Spend 15 minutes a day this week alone and in silence to see if you can become more aware of God speaking to you.

Poetic Reflection:

Read the Following poem by Thomas Merton. Do you think that Jesus heard, in silence, the very stones speaking his name? Have you been silent and attentive enough to listen to the love of God burning in your heart, and indeed burning everywhere around you?

“In Silence”

Be still
Listen to the stones of the wall.
Be silent, they try
To speak your

Name.
Listen
To the living walls.
Who are you?
Who Are you? Whose
Silence are you?

Who (be quiet)
Are you (as these stones
Are quiet). Do not
Think of what you are
Still less of
What you may one day be
Rather
Be what you are (but who?) be
The unthinkable one
You do not know.

O be still, while
you are still alive,
And all things live around you
Speaking (I do not hear)
To your own being,
Speaking by the Unknown
That is in you and in themselves.

“I will try, like them
To be my own silence:
And this is difficult. The whole
World is secretly on fire. The stones
Burn, even the stones
They burn me. How can a man be still or
Listen to all things burning? How can he dare
To sit with them when
All their silence
Is on fire?”

Closing Prayer

From Faith: Daily Prayers for Virtue, by Wayne Simsic:

Jesus, you say “I am the way”. Transform me. Come alive in me so that I can become like you and serve as a guide for others. Let me experience the truth of your message and the power and presence of God in that message. In darkness, be my light. In struggles, be my serenity. In my life, be my love.

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A Reflection on the Transfiguration of the Lord

As the disciples spend more time with Jesus, as they hear what he is saying and see what he is doing, they must have been asking, “Who is this Rabbi to whom we have attached ourselves; who is this Jesus?” Strangely, the answer comes from their own mouths.

Luke 9:28-36
Matthew: 17:1-9
Mark 9:2-10

From “Living Space,” a service of the Irish Jesuits:

The Transfiguration of the Lord commemorates an event in the life of Jesus as recorded by the Synoptic gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke. It is not recorded in John’s gospel. One each of the three Gospel versions is read according to the Liturgical cycle of Years A, B, and C. However, the three versions are very similar and occur in the same context of the Gospel account, so one reflection will be given to cover all three. 

In all three Synoptic gospels the story of the Transfiguration occurs in the same context and that context is significant. We are in the middle of the Gospel account and things have been building up to a climax. As the disciples spend more time with Jesus, as they hear what he is saying and see what he is doing, they must have been asking, “Who is this Rabbi to whom we have attached ourselves; who is this Jesus?” Strangely, the answer comes from their own mouths.

One day, when Jesus was with them, he asked them, “Who do people say the Son of Man is?” (He was using this strange title of himself.) Based on what they must have been hearing from people around them, they said there were various speculative answers – John the Baptist (resurrected from the dead), Elijah (ditto) or some other of the prophets. Jesus then pressed them further: “But who do you say I am?” It is then that Peter speaks up: “You are the Messiah, the Christ.” It was a peak moment in their relationship with Jesus. And an exciting one. How their imaginations must have begun to work on what it meant to be so closely associated with the Messiah, the King who would be the Savior and Liberator of Israel! What glories and privileges awaited them! But almost immediately Jesus begins to speak in a very different way. For the first time (it will happen three times altogether) he tells them what is future is going to be. And it must have come as a terrible shock. Jesus told them he was going to suffer greatly, be rejected by the leaders of their own people, be killed and then rise again after three days. They could not believe their ears. How could this happen to the Messiah? How could their own leaders do such a thing? And what would it mean for the dazzling future they saw dangling before their eyes? The impetuous Peter immediately stepped forward: “This cannot happen to you!” he cried. He can hardly have expected the reaction of Jesus: “Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me!” And while they are recovering from this, Jesus continues by saying that not only will he himself suffer but, if they want to be his disciples, they will have to be ready to walk the same road. “Those who wish to follow me must deny themselves, take up their cross and follow me.”

It is in this depressing situation of disillusionment and incomprehension that the Transfiguration takes place. We are told that six days later (eight days in Luke) Jesus took Peter, James and his brother John up a high mountain by themselves. The identity of the mountain is not given and it is not important. In the Scriptures, mountains are holy places and special things always happen there – we think for instance of Mount Sinai (Moses), Mount Carmel (Elijah), the Sermon on the Mountain, the Feeding of the 5,000, and Calvary (Golgotha) was a hill outside Jerusalem. There before them Jesus is suddenly transformed, dazzlingly bright. They can hardly look on him. Suddenly there appear with him Moses and Elijah. They represent the whole Jewish tradition of the Law and the Prophets. They are seen talking with Jesus. The message is clear. They fully endorse what Jesus is doing and saying and the future he has foretold about himself. Peter becomes utterly confused. He suggests the building of three shelters – one each for Jesus, Moses and Elijah. As Mark comments, “He hardly knew what to say, they were so terrified.” But that was not all. Just then, a cloud came down and covered them. This was not just a change in the weather. To the biblical mind it spoke of only one thing – the presence of Yahweh himself. And then out of the cloud came a voice; it could only be the voice of One Being. “This is my beloved Son; listen to him.” Here now is the supreme endorsement of the Son by his Father. “Listen to him.” Yes, listen, even when he says things that you don’t like, things that you do not yet understand. It is a confirmation of all that has gone on before – the real identity of who Jesus is and the reliability of everything that he says will happen to him and what is expected of them.

It is a special moment of encouragement which will help carry them through the difficult days ahead. They already have the answer to the question, “Who is Jesus?” But now they have to learn the answer to a more important question, “What kind of Messiah is Jesus going to be?” They will not fully appropriate that until after the Resurrection and Ascension of Jesus when they will boldly continue his mission and not hesitate to carry their cross in doing so. Let us follow in their footsteps. That is where true happiness and fulfilment lie.

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First Sunday in Lent, March 6, 2022

What are my temptations?

Gospel: Luke 4:1–13
Jesus…was led by the Spirit into the desert for forty days, to be tempted by the devil.

Lent helps us find our true self. Jesus did that in the desert. By denying who he was not, he affirmed his true identity—one sent by God to walk our human path in fidelity to God, even in times of failure and pain.

What are my temptations?

Luke 4:1–13

Filled with the holy Spirit, Jesus returned from the Jordan and was led by the Spirit into the desert for forty days, to be tempted by the devil. He ate nothing during those days, and when they were over he was hungry.

The devil said to him, “If you are the Son of God, command this stone to become bread.”

Jesus answered him, “It is written, ‘One does not live by bread alone.’” Then he took him up and showed him all the kingdoms of the world in a single instant.

The devil said to him, “I shall give to you all this power and their glory; for it has been handed over to me, and I may give it to whomever I wish.

“All this will be yours, if you worship me.”

Jesus said to him in reply, “It is written: ‘You shall worship the Lord, your God, and him alone shall you serve.’

Then he led him to Jerusalem, made him stand on the parapet of the temple, and said to him, “If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down from here, for it is written: ‘He will command his angels concerning you, to guard you,’ and: ‘With their hands they will support you, lest you dash your foot against a stone.’”

Jesus said to him in reply, “It also says, ‘You shall not put the Lord, your God, to the test.’”

When the devil had finished every temptation he departed from him for a time.

Music Meditations

  • On Eagle’s Wings—Michael Joncas
  • The Lord Is My Shepherd—John Rutter, Cambridge Singers
  • Psalm 22—The Psalm Project

Companions for the Journey

This is a short writing from one of the Christian or non-Christian witnesses of our tradition—a person who embodies the theme of the gospel we are studying today. This commentary is from “First Impressions”, a service of the Southern Dominican Province.

The temptations are at the beginning of Jesus’ ministry when he begins his journey, his walk with us. He extends an invitation for us to join him—to walk the way he walks in the world. Today’s gospel takes place after Jesus has just been baptized by John in the Jordan. No sooner has the walk started than Jesus meets the Tempter. The devil challenges how real Jesus’ immersion among is will be. Will he command the stone to become bread? In other words, will he know physical hunger and pain, as well as the same longings of the heart we do; or will he just use his powers and satisfy his needs and wants at whim? Will he choose to attract followers by spectacle, by filling their bellies with nothing more lasting than a quick meal? If he fell for the temptation, he would have skipped over the physical and emotional pain we all must have at one time or another. In addition, he would have attracted followers who would have stayed on as long as the free lunch lasted; only until it got too painful to follow him.

The devil has more to offer Jesus. Having shown Jesus “all the kingdoms of the world” the devil makes an offer many humans have, to one degree or another, accepted: Jesus can gain power and influence by worshiping at the altar of power, compromise and deals. In rejecting this temptation, Jesus chooses to live an ordinary person’s life, to undergo the subjection endured by his neighbors in an occupied land. He will walk the path of the oppressed. Those without name recognition will see in him one who is totally faithful in his choice to be human.

The devil goes on: “If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down from here, for it is written, ‘God will command the angels concerning you, to guard you....’” It is tempting to think that a proof of God’s love for us is a comfortable and pain free life. Certainly this notion of a protected life, of expecting to be spared of all pain and disappointment as God’s beloved, would be a temptation throughout Jesus’ entire life, especially as he endured his passion. Where is God when we are suffering? I thought God loved me. If God really loved me I wouldn’t be in this pain.....failed at this project....been betrayed by those I trusted...etc. But there doesn’t seem to have been an escape clause written into Jesus’ being one of us. He didn’t get out in the nick of time; and so his followers must resist the temptation to opt out when the path of discipleship brings suffering. Nor would Jesus try to attract people to him by shows of divine favor. There would be no quick rescue by God when the forces of evil closed in on him; no angels to show up to protect him. That’s just not what it means for us humans, and so that’s not what it will mean for Jesus as he fulfills his word to be one with us.

Having listened to the tempting offers made by the devil, Jesus turns away from the tempter and towards us. Like us he will stumble and get hurt, know hunger and see his project collapse. He will risk all, placing his message into the hands, not of the powerful, but ordinary people like us. He takes a chance on them, trusts his future to them. The devil has asked him, in effect, “Will you walk totally with these humans? Take their journey to the end? Avoid easy outs, and a flashy success story? Jesus’ response, as evidenced in today’s gospel, is “Yes I will.” The rest of the gospel shows us he walked the talk.

A man I know went to an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. As he entered the room, he saw broken and needy people. His response, “I am not like one of those people.” Too bad, if he had admitted his need and identified with the others in the room, he might have been able to change his life. Lent has begun for us. It is like entering a room that contains others like us: people who have strayed from their commitments; fallen or stumbled; made new resolutions kept them with only some success. All in this room of Lent need forgiveness, all of us need, to one degree or another, to make adjustments in our life’s game plan. We all need to “walk the talk.”

No one forces us into this Lent. We need to choose it for ourselves. We look into this new room we are entering, this Lent, see the folks around us and say, “I am like these people. I too need to face myself and be true to my better self.” It is tempting to pull out, or enter this season half-heartedly. But if we desire to “walk the talk” of being Christians together, then we need this Lent to reorient us. Lent helps us find our true self. Jesus did that in the desert. By denying who he was not, he affirmed his true identity—one sent by God to walk our human path in fidelity to God, even in times of failure and pain. What he did, we can do, because our baptism has given us the gift of the Spirit, the same Spirit that was Jesus’ in the desert when he chose to walk the talk with us.

Read another reflection on the temptations of Jesus >> (adapted from a chapter in The Hidden Jesus by Donald Spoto).

Weekly Memorization

Taken from the gospel for today’s session…

Jesus…was led by the Spirit into the desert for forty days, to be tempted by the devil.

Living the Good News

What action can you take in the next week as a response to today’s reading and discussion?

Keep a private journal of your prayer/actions responses this week. Feel free to use the personal reflection questions or the meditations which follow:

Reflection Questions

  • When our mental or emotional resources are thin, what temptations might we be prey to?
  • How do I define “the devil” in my life and what does “the devil” tempt me to do or not to do?
  • Are my temptations similar to Jesus’ (money, power, relevance)?
  • In our money-centered culture, we are bombarded with more and more inducement to acquire, own, possess STUFF. (We are subjected, through various media, to over 5000 advertisements a day.) How does this kind of milieu tempt us to want more?
  • If not “bread”, what do you hunger for?
  • Where does corruption in government and industry fit it? How can we avoid being part of it?
  • Does fasting help us discipline ourselves to seek only what we need?
  • Can the scriptures “feed me” during Lent?
  • What of my money/possessions am I willing to give away? How generous am I, really?
  • What is the role of power in our society? Who has it, and how does that person keep it?
  • What personal power do I have over my environment, over my everyday life, over my friends and relatives?
  • Who has power over me? Do I resent it? Has power ever been misused against me?
  • From “First Impressions”, a service of the Southern Dominican Province:
    Do I feel the Church has ever used its power inappropriately to coerce people into observance and conformity?
  • Have I ever withheld approval, affection from someone to assert my power over that a person?
    Have I ever, in effect, said: “My needs are more important than yours”?
    Have I ever been a victim of this kind of abuse of power?
  • How can I transform power into service?
    What are some of the positive aspects of power vis-à-vis helping others?
    What are some of the negative ones?
  • Have you ever tried to “force God’s hand”, to make God prove in some way that you are important to God?
  • Was there ever an incident or time in your life when you sort of asked God to PROVE his love for you by granting you a favor or by avoiding something negative?
  • If I am a good person, do I expect God to reward me with health, good fortune and happiness?
  • Do I engage in Lenten practices to make God love me more/
    How do I make God love me more?
  • Where in my temptations have I felt the guidance or presence of the Holy Spirit?
  • What is the role of trust in overcoming life’s temptations?
    In whom do I trust?
    In what do I trust?
    How do I inspire trust?
  • Has there been a time in your life when the experience of being tempted taught you something about yourself?
  • The gospel says that the devil departed from Jesus “for a time”. Have I ever found myself subject to the same old temptations, again and again?

Meditations

A Meditation in the Dominican Style/Asking Questions:

“Let us never forget that the ordinary way to contemplation lies through a desert without trees and without beauty and without water. The spirit enters a wilderness and travels blindly in directions that seem to lead away from vision, away from God, away from all fulfillment and joy. It may be almost impossible to believe that this road goes anywhere at all except to a desolation full of dry bones—the ruin of all our hopes and good intentions” (Thomas Merton, New Seeds of Contemplation)

What desert are you experiencing in your life at this time—love, creativity, friendship, family, accomplishments, compulsions, insecurities? How is this wilderness experience inviting you to place your trust in God? Do you trust in the Spirit enough to give yourself totally to God? What have you held back? What are you afraid of?

—from Songs of Life, Psalm Meditations from the Catholic Community at Stanford, by Anne Greenfield

A Meditation in the Ignatian Style/Imagination:

Read Luke 4:1-11 (The testing in the desert).

Forty days in a desert. Just imagine it. What does it look like? How hot is it during the day? What sounds are there? Does it smell? Are there any animals? Are you hungry? What do you do all day?

Night in the desert: the lonely sounds of an animal in the distance. Are you cold? Afraid? Lonely? Bored?

This is the time when Jesus was most vulnerable, and so He was tempted. Jesus was tempted to use his talents to provide for his own needs; He was tempted to test God’s love; and finally, He was tempted to forsake his trust in God in return for earthly power. How did he react? Are these temptations at all like our human temptations? Have you ever been so tempted? Have you been able to turn to God in these times of temptation? Has God been a source of strength and comfort? Close with a personal prayer thanking God for the strength you have been given to trust during the dark times.

—from Songs of Life, Psalm Meditations from the Catholic Community at Stanford, by Anne Greenfield

A Meditation in the Franciscan Style/Action:

Give something away. Now.

A Meditation in the Augustinian Style/Relationship:

A major theme of this gospel section is Jesus’ trust in his Father’s love and care. This was a big part of the religious tradition into which Jesus was born and in which he operated. Some of this is found in the psalms. Read Psalm 91 below, then transpose “he” into “you” and “you” into “me” so that you are imagining God speaking directly to you and that you are speaking directly to God about your trust in him.

(example of transposition of first verse: I dwell in your shelter, Almighty one, and I will rest in your shadow)

1 Whoever dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty. 2 I will say of the Lord, “He is my refuge and my fortress,  my God, in whom I trust.” 3 Surely he will save you from the fowler’s snare and from the deadly pestilence. He will cover you with his feathers, and under his wings you will find refuge; his faithfulness will be your shield and rampart. 5 You will not fear the terror of night, nor the arrow that flies by day, 6 nor the pestilence that stalks in the darkness, nor the plague that destroys at midday. 7 A thousand may fall at your side, ten thousand at your right hand, but it will not come near you. 8 You will only observe with your eyes and see the punishment of the wicked. 9 If you say, “The Lord is my refuge,” and you make the Most High your dwelling, 10 no harm will overtake you, no disaster will come near your tent. 11 For he will command his angels concerning you to guard you in all your ways; 12 they will lift you up in their hands, so that you will not strike your foot against a stone. 13 You will tread on the lion and the cobra; you will trample the great lion and the serpent. 14 “Because he loves me,” says the Lord, “I will rescue him; I will protect him, for he acknowledges my name. 15 He will call on me, and I will answer him; I will be with him in trouble, I will deliver him and honor him. 16 With long life I will satisfy him  and show him my salvation.”
Literary Reflection:

Father Michael Kennedy. S.J.’s take on todays gospel:

Hey Look Again
(1st Sunday of Lent)

Sometimes we find Out later that the very Thing we were so sure about Is not only not true it is so Far from truth that we feel Stupid and used and really Very hopeless about our own Gifts of discernment and Our ability to read Any situation or Even people

Maybe we finally Have to admit that When evil presents itself In our lives it comes in with Great appeal and often disguised As noble and worth pursuing rather Than as something that must be Avoided at all costs for it is very Hard to spot a satan when he Puts his arm around you while Gently saying nice things and Offers you enough power And wealth to fulfill Your dreams

But we can only See through deception if We also look with the eyes of our Hearts and souls for we need not ask What would Jesus do but what would He have us do and would we always Be in tune with the Gospel with Love at our center for if the Action or the seducer are not In line with the Sermon On the Mount we need to Hear Jesus say to us Hey look again

Poetic Reflection:

A reflection on temptation from Pastor Dan, a Lutheran Pastor and Blogger from Anchorage, Alaska:

Sometimes you know Deep down inside you just know But you have to test Children do it all the time Test They know But they just want to really know Who’s in charge Are things the same And they test The people Israel knew They had their time For forty years they wandered And were put to the test And they knew the story Each line by heart To say one line Said them all And they lived that time And answered the question Who’s in charge? After forty days Jesus was hungry And they knew they had been there too they knew the hunger they knew the pain and they felt each moment when the temptations came and the forty years of their wanderings came back and they remembered that time and they remembered their lack as they whined and groaned and fell into sin at each temptation again and again and answered the question who’s in charge? If you are who you say then tell these rocks And the question rang Tell them to be bread so you can eat The devil sang And the question came out loud and clear And Israel knew it Knew it deep in their hearts Because they lived it And they prayed it Each day of their lives Shema The Lord is our God The Lord is one But still that question it needs to be near and the question rang out who’s in charge here and the answer came as did manna from above that we don’t live on just bread but we live on each word that comes from our God who’s in charge but that wasn’t enough and Jesus was taken to the temple in Jerusalem and the devil said it’s time to test God and the claim that you’re really the son so jump from this temple jump down and show the world that God’s really true God said you’d be safe So prove it. Now Jump Maybe I’ll stop bugging you too… And Israel remembered How they had tested their Lord And the question rang out loud and clear And Jesus snapped back Don’t put God to the test And the question…… Who’s in charge here Next Jesus was led To the top of the mountain To see all the kingdoms below And Israel remembered Shema Israel They remembered their own calf of gold As Moses was taken on high They knew They remembered How miserable they failed in their task And Moses had seen What the people had done And again the question was asked It’s yours You can have it You can be their messiah Just bow down and worship me now And Jesus responded Satan! Go to hell! For it is written Worship and serve only God Remembered Israel They remembered their prayer Shema The Lord is our God The Lord is one
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The Lure: A Reflection on the Temptations of Jesus

Woven into the gospel tradition is a poignant theme in the life of Jesus: the constant temptation to take the easy way out, to give in to the cry of the crowd, to accept adulation as a king.

Adapted from a chapter in The Hidden Jesus by Donald Spoto:

In addition to the stormy seas of Galilee, other storms troubled Jesus during his ministry, for he had to deal continually with a singular risky result of his activity. He spoke with such authority and dealt with people so directly and compassionately that often people hailed him as a specific kind of messiah—indeed a king. They wanted him to be the deliverer whom popular sentiment longed for, one who would lift up Israel from political subordination and establish its prominence among the nations. But such earthly aspirations were never his—hence his persistent and determined rejection of the celebrity, the pomp and the temporal supremacy that public zeal might have secured for him. Woven into the gospel tradition is a poignant theme in the life of Jesus: the constant temptation to take the easy way out, to give in to the cry of the crowd, to accept adulation as a king. As Jesus saw it, this would have been infidelity to his mission, which was something more spiritual: the proclamation and inauguration of the kingdom of God—the good news that God is indeed at work in the human sphere, drawing to himself and saving what He has made. Of this deliverance and salvation, the liberating message of Jesus and the wonderful deeds God performed through him were the establishing signs. God’s domain has nothing to do with and kind of temporal power or supremacy….

Jesus must have been particularly tempted to yield to popular flattery when he met opposition from religious leaders and interference from enemies, and in this regard the tradition behind the gospels has been preserved in a singly brilliantly concise episode—the motif of the perilous lure of renown and power. The so-called temptation narrative is nothing like reportage; rather an essentially interior struggle has been artfully rendered in a classic rabbinic dialogue. In the wilderness forty and nights [recall Moses’ forty day fast on Mt. Sinai and the Israel’s forty year trek in the desert]….Jesus begins to consummate the destiny of his people.

Now comes the first enticement: Make it easy on yourself—stop fasting and praying and turn stones into bread. Behind this is the popular notion that the Messiah-king would wondrously provide food in abundance for everyone. For some who want to do good and alleviate suffering, this motivation is more important than the means by which money is obtained to help the poor: getting in bed with corporations which harm the environment or employ child labor and other abusive labor practices; taking a few moral short-cuts here and there as long as the end goals of helping others are achieved; cutting deals which defy the laws but put more money in our charitable coffers. When the needs are so great and our causes are so desperate, cutting moral corners doesn’t seem so bad, does it?

The second enticement (the third enticement in Matthew) is the great offer of secular messianism, the temptation to use worldly power to accomplish a political goal. In a culture where power is simply way to get important things done, this may not strike us as inherently a bad thing. Until we remember the adage that “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely”, we are caught in the seductive siren call to make a difference, to matter, to leave our mark on the world. Jesus’ answer that all power belongs only to God may strike us as naïve or romantic, but the gospel writers are telling us that renunciation of power is how the kingdom of God works. This flies in the face of our individual Darwinian tendencies and is so ingrained in our cultural milieu, that Jesus answer seems naive at best and suicidal at the worst.

The last enticement is much more subtle: it asks Jesus to demand proof from God that what he is doing matters, that he matters. Even at the end of his life, according to two gospel accounts, Jesus felt abandoned by his creator and Father. Faith in God is not just belief in credal concepts, it is trust that we are loved and cared for by God. We humans have also asked God to prove that we matter in the divine scheme of things and to God personally. Many good and religious people unconsciously think that we have to earn God’s love, or that God’s love for us is manifested in the good things that happen to us. One of the dangers of spiritual life is the sense that because we are good, religious, prayerful people, we are entitled to have nothing bad happen to us. Some have even been known to try to bribe God with a promise to do or renounce something in return for a favor or for escaping some catastrophe (oh please, oh please, I will do whatever you want, God). What is prayer for?

The gospels reiterate that the entire ministry of Jesus was hedged round with inducements to ease instead of sacrifice, to power instead of poverty of spirit. As late as his last meal, Jesus spoke with weary gratitude to his closest disciples: “You are those who have stood by me in my trials.” Those trials and temptations virtually defined the entire arc of his life—not only the lure of social-political power, but also the occasional efforts even by his friends to deter Jesus from his difficult but destined road, to encourage him to seek comfort over commitment.

To all who have felt, or feel, or fear feeling lost, Jesus came with the announcement of God’s infinite compassion. In Jesus’ words and actions, God was drawing near to everyone without exception.

The commission given to those who follow Jesus of Nazareth was to announce that compassion, to proclaim God’s infinite attention to human need.

But just as he did, the disciples of Jesus—and all those wo later so identify themselves—had to renounce, wherever it appears and however one is tempted to it, the precarious lure of power.

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8th Sunday in Ordinary Time, February 27, 2022

If we take the lessons of Jesus to heart we will be more like him

Gospel: Luke 6:39–45
Remove the wooden beam from your eye first; then you will see clearly to remove the splinter from your brother’s eye.

Jesus calls attention to the quality of our hearts. “A good person out of the store of goodness in his/her heart produces good....” Our individual hearts need tending. Our church heart needs attention as well.

If we take the lessons of Jesus to heart we will be more like him

Luke 6:39–45

And he told them a parable, “Can a blind person guide a blind person? Will not both fall into a pit?

No disciple is superior to the teacher; but when fully trained, every disciple will be like his teacher.

Why do you notice the splinter in your brother’s eye, but do not perceive the wooden beam in your own?

How can you say to your brother, ‘Brother, let me remove that splinter in your eye,’ when you do not even notice the wooden beam in your own eye? You hypocrite! Remove the wooden beam from your eye first; then you will see clearly to remove the splinter in your brother’s eye.

“A good tree does not bear rotten fruit, nor does a rotten tree bear good fruit.

For every tree is known by its own fruit. For people do not pick figs from thornbushes, nor do they gather grapes from brambles.

A good person out of the store of goodness in his heart produces good, but an evil person out of a store of evil produces evil; for from the fullness of the heart the mouth speaks.”

Music Meditations

  • Open My Eyes, Lord (Jesse Manibusan)
  • Lead Me, Lord (John Becker)
  • Lead Me, Guide Me (Velma Lewis—a gospel edition)
  • Lead Me, Lord (Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir)

Opening Prayer

Prayer of Mary, Queen of Scots:

Keep us, O God, from all pettiness. Let us be large in thought, in word, in deed. Let us be done with fault-finding and leave off all self-seeking. May we put away all pretense and meet each other face-to-face, Without self-pity and without prejudice. May we never be hasty in judgment, always generous. Let us take time for all things, and make us grow calm, serene, and gentle. Teach us to put into action our better impulses, to be straight-forward and unafraid. Grant that we may realize that it is the little things of life that create differences, That in the big things of life we are one. And, Lord, God, let us not forget to be Kind.

Companions for the Journey

This is a short writing from one of the Christian or non-Christian witnesses of our tradition—a person who embodies the theme of the gospel we are studying today. This commentary is from “First Impressions”, a service of the Southern Dominican Province.

This part of Luke is from the “Sermon on the Plain.” It’s similar to Matthew’s “Sermon on the Mount” but, as it is with the Gospels, each writer comes at the story from a different perspective. The passage of time, the growth of the church outside its original Jewish setting and the needs of their own church community, dictated that each evangelist tell the story in a way that would speak to his unique community with its special needs and circumstances.

Luke writes for a church which has already gone through its initial fervor. The earlier concerns of primitive Christianity are no longer present. When Luke wrote the church was a more organized institution. Its members had discovered that Jesus’ return was not as imminent as the earlier disciples thought. It was a church getting accustomed to being around for the foreseeable future. It was therefore a church that needed to be challenged again to live a life of prayer, maintain total commitment to the Lord Jesus, shun reliance on money and live a community life that would be a visible sign to others that Christ was alive.

In today’s passage he is describing what should characterize the community of his followers. Imagine a community of people living the kind of life described in this sermon. Jesus wants an entirely new way of living for his followers. First, Jesus advises that the individual disciples are not to go off teaching the faith on their own until they are formed. They are not to be “superior to the teacher but when fully trained every disciple will be like his/her teacher.” They will have to learn from their teachers, lest they lose sight of the teachings of Jesus and introduce another way of living in the Christian community. In this community people are treated differently. They are not to condemn, judge or find fault with one another. They are to treat one another with compassion and forgiveness.

What, one wonders, would be the effects on a community, if this kindness towards one another were truly present? Such a community would in itself be a preaching of the Gospel, even before any member went out on the road to preach. They would be a sign to all outsiders observing them of radical equity, where all were equal regardless of their social and economic standing. This community is called to a special way of life that imitates Jesus’.

The spirituality Jesus is teaching is not just meant for the enlightenment and behavior of the individual. God’s love is effective; it produces good fruit for the benefit of others. The good fruit we bear becomes a way we teach the faith to others. A parent complains his teenage son does not want to be “lectured” to about religion. This may very well be a time in their relationship for the father to reflect on how he communicates with his son, as well as how he listens to him. That having been said, there is also a strong faith teaching that is communicated just by the way the father lives his discipleship. The son will “learn the faith” by reading it in the life of his father. In this case the old saw is true, “actions speak louder than words.” Any child is a constant recording machine of his/her parents’ lives. As the child grows, what was passed on through the parents “good fruits,” may be the strength the child needs in a particularly difficult period. A good parent will be a good tree that bears good fruit..., will be a good person who, “...out of the store of goodness in his/her heart produces good.”

Children of such good parents, are constantly “eating” the good fruit a parent provided through the example of their lives. So, a woman will explain the source of her remarkable hospitality or concern for the poor and say, “my mother always went out of her way to welcome guests, especially when they were less fortunate than we were.” A grown son will remember, “my father used to volunteer at the parish clothing drive, and so I try to help those in need too.” A good tree bears good fruit that never seems to stop nourishing and forming another generation of disciples. We could pray at this liturgy for our hearts, that they remain malleable in God’s hands and receive the ongoing shaping that God is doing to make them disciples’. When our hearts are good, we will spontaneously produce the good Jesus speaks of, as if by second nature.

Jesus calls attention to the quality of our hearts. “A good person out of the store of goodness in his/her heart produces good....” Our individual hearts need tending. Our church heart needs attention as well. For example, our church communities do not always produce the good fruits of mutual forgiveness. We seem judgmental to non-members, we don’t always communicate hospitality to the outsider and marginalized, etc. Does our community draw from the goodness of its heart? Is our church community the Sermon on the Plain made visible in our age? Not all that flows from our hearts matches the behavior described in Luke’s account of Jesus’ sermon. Lent will be a time when we do “heart work.” We will open a construction area in our hearts. Think of those construction areas we see about our cities, the “hard hat” places where serious work is going on. That’s what will be happening for us in Lent. We are all disciples in training, waiting to be “fully trained,” when we will more perfectly reflect the life of Christ. Like Luke’s community, we continually need to hear again the instructions of the Teacher. Jesus is also speaking of himself as our teacher when he says, “No disciple is superior to the teacher, but when fully trained, every disciple will be like his/her teacher.” That’s our Lenten goal, that we will have our hearts and minds further shaped by the Teacher and as a result we will more and more become “like the teacher.”

Weekly Memorization

Taken from the gospel for today’s session…

Remove the wooden beam from your eye first; then you will see clearly to remove the splinter from your brother’s eye.

Living the Good News

What action can you take in the next week as a response to today’s reading and discussion?

Keep a private journal of your prayer/actions responses this week. Feel free to use the personal reflection questions or the meditations which follow:

Reflection Questions

  • Luke’s church was in need of re-commitment to prayer and community life. Does this same need exist in our present church?
  • The first lines of this gospel are about discernment: We should look at what people do, not what they say. Our words and actions reflect the condition of our spiritual hearts.
    Have you ever run across someone whose true goodness was reflected in the way (s)he treated others?
    Have you ever run across those who pretended goodness with a certain sense of self-righteousness?
  • Did my self-righteousness ever blind me to the “log in my own eye”?
    What is the log in my eye that is blinding me to the goodness of another? (anxiety, poor self-esteem, culture of competitiveness, over-inflated sense of my own worth—this is not an excuse, but to recognize it honestly is the beginning dealing with it)
  • Have I ever criticized a friend or relative for a certain habitual behavior, and then realized that I sort of do the same thing?
  • Does my ambition blind me to the needs of others or the worth of others?
  • How much of our conversation is focused on the faults and failings of others?
  • How often do I fail? Do I acknowledge my failures to myself? To others?
  • Am I aware of my inadequacies, but not so scrupulous that it paralyzes me?
    Have I ever used my shortcomings as a way to be gentler and more understanding of others?
  • Do I habitually look at others with “God’s eyes”?
    Do I make a practice of thinking of the best of others?
  • How do I relate to those who live with me, work with me (Am I judgmental, kind, condescending, respectful, bossy, passive, a martyr?) Do I view my daily interactions as a way to practice being compassionate, generous of spirit, and loving?
  • What is the role of humility?
    What is false humility?
  • What lessons from the life of Jesus have I learned about the kind of person I should be? Where can I do better?
Catholic Community at Stanford’s Encounter Christ small group faith sharing offers the opportunity to meet and reflect with others on questions like these as well as other aspects of the journey of faith.

Meditations

A Meditation in the Ignatian Style/Imagination:

I read Luke 18:9-14 (the Pharisee and the Tax Collector). I place myself in the events of this little story. What does the temple look like? Where is each man standing? What is each man wearing? Form a picture in your mind of what each man actually looks like—tall, short, handsome, plain, bearded or not, bald or hirsute, etc. … What is the posture and manner of the Pharisee? How about that of the tax collector? With whom do I identify: the man who did what he was supposed to, gave to the poor, prayed often and regularly, and was an honest, good person; or the tax collector, who preyed on the weak and the helpless, extorting monies from them that they could not afford, and raking in a good profit for himself? When we try to live a good life, and mostly succeed, is it hard not to be a little smug sometimes? When we try and fail and fail at being the kind of person we want, is it hard not to give up sometimes?

In what way am I like each of them? I try to put myself in each man’s shoes. First I look t the part of me that loves and honors God and tries to be a good person. Do I unconsciously measure my goodness against that of others around me? Do I frequently air my opinions about those who are doing wrong? Then I look at the part of me that has made mistakes and hurt people. Am I willing to admit this? And if I DO admit my flaws and failings, do I wear them like a martyr, seeking sympathy and understanding which I am sometimes not willing to grant to others?

If someone has hurt me, do I use that mistake or unkindness as a weapon to guilt others into paying me attention or feeling sorry for me? Is there someone in my life that I need to forgive as God forgives?

A Meditation in the Dominican style/Asking Questions:

Adapted from Sacred Space 2019:

I bring myself before Jesus and allow myself some time to be regarded by his loving look. I ask him to remove any speck or plank that may be in my eye. I pray for the clarity of vision that he had. My perspective may not be the best one; my view of myself and of the world may need correction. I pray for humility and for a deeper capacity to perceive God’s presence and action around me. It does not matter how good your religion looks on the outside, “the Lord looketh on the heart.” It does not matter how much you impress men, or yourself for that matter, with what you say and do, “the Lord looketh on the heart.” It does not matter how sound your doctrine is, “the Lord looketh on the heart.” It does not matter how precisely you keep the ordinances, “the Lord looketh on the heart.” It does not matter how much money you give, how many chapters you read, how much Scripture you memorize, how much you pray, or how often you attend church, “the Lord looketh on the heart.” God wants our hearts. God demands our hearts. The root of the matter is the heart. “My son, give me thine heart.” If the heart is right, the fruit is good, no matter how bad it looks to men. If the heart is evil, the fruit is evil, no matter how good it looks to men. Do not judge. You are what you do Be careful of following a blind person Be careful of teaching others if your heart is not like Jesus’—if you are preaching rather than being.

A Meditation in the Augustinian Style/Relationship:

Fr. Tony DeMello, S.J., said “when I change, the whole world changes.” Attitude is everything. I bring myself before Jesus and allow myself some time to be regarded by his loving look. I ask him to remove any speck or plank that may be in my eye. I pray for the clarity of vision that he had. My perspective may not be the best one; my view of myself and of the world may need correction. For example, when I am listening to others am I only seeing their faults and failings? Can I look back at the last 24 hours and see where I might have been very busy judging someone else? Where might I need an “attitude adjustment”? I pray to Jesus for humility and for a deeper capacity to perceive God’s presence and action around me.

A Meditation in the Franciscan Style/Action:

This week, any time someone irritates you or makes you angry, any time someone does something in word or deed to hurt you, stop and say a prayer for that person. Ask God to be good to that person and grant that person health and happiness. And mean it!

Poetic Reflection:

Thomas Centolella, a Stanford Stegner Fellow, wrote a poem that really captures the message of today’s gospel:

“In The Evening We Shall Be Examined On Love”
-St. John of the Cross

And it won’t be multiple choice,
though some of us would prefer it that way.
Neither will it be essay, which tempts us to run on
when we should be sticking to the point, if not together.
In the evening there shall be implications
our fear will turn to complications. No cheating,
we’ll be told and we’ll try to figure the cost of being true
to ourselves. In the evening when the sky has turned
that certain blue, blue of exam books, blue of no more
daily evasions, we shall climb the hill as the light empties
and park our tired bodies on a bench above the city
and try to fill in the blanks. And we won’t be tested
like defendants on trial, cross-examined
till one of us breaks down, guilty as charged. No,
in the evening, after the day has refused to testify,
we shall be examined on love like students
who don’t even recall signing up for the course
and now must take their orals, forced to speak for once
from the heart and not off the top of their heads.
And when the evening is over and it’s late,
the student body asleep, even the great teachers
retired for the night, we shall stay up
and run back over the questions, each in our own way:
what’s true, what’s false, what unknown quantity
will balance the equation, what it would mean years from now
to look back and know
we did not fail.

(from Lights & Mysteries)

Literary Reflection:
In this very short poem by Mary Oliver, we get a glimpse of a way the we can treat an experience of being hurt, and forgive that person for the hurt inflicted. Has this ever been your experience?
“The Uses of Sorrow”

(In my sleep I dreamed the poem) Someone I loved once gave me a box full of darkness. It took me years to understand that this, too, was a gift.

Closing Prayer

Jesus, you ask a lot of me. It is sometimes so hard for me to be kind, or understanding or forgiving when I am hurt or angry. It is so hard to love as you did, asking for nothing in return. This does not come naturally to me. Help me to look for the best in people, making allowances for their faults and failings. Help me not to carry grudges which diminish happiness my life and in the lives of those around me. Help me to understand the conviction of St. John of the Cross: “In the Evening we will be judged on love.”

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