(Homily for the 1st Sunday of Lent Year A)
The readings
of this first Sunday of Lent present the miserable condition of man caused by
the fall of our first parents and on the other hand, our redemption in Christ. They present Adam’s weakness before the
temptation of the serpent and Christ’s resistance and strength before the
temptations of Satan, from the first, sin and death gained entrance into
the world, while from the later, life and freedom. No doubt, the themes of our
reflection today therefore revolve around fall and obedience, death and life,
fallen humanity and redeemed humanity. The
messages of the three readings are somewhat intertwined, for the Genesis story
of Adam and Eve can be related to the Gospel narrative of the victory of Jesus
over temptations, through the analogy that St. Paul made in the second reading
between Adam and Christ. A profound perusal into the readings of this
Sunday places the old Adam and the New Adam side by side. And the hymn of
Newman reveals very well the aforementioned analogy and thus helps us to go
in-depth:
O loving
wisdom of our God!
When all
was seen and shame,
A second
Adam to the fight
And to
the rescue came.
O wisest
love! That flesh and blood,
Which
did in Adam fail,
Should strive
afresh against the foe
Should
strive and should prevail.
Truly, it is through the prevailing of the New Adam
that we can stand our ground in resisting the temptations of the evil one, but
most importantly through that we can make a spiritual retrospection in
recognition of our failings and the courage to ask God for pardon. It is on
that note that the words of the responsorial Psalm introduce us not only to the
spiritual climate of Lent but also to the reality of our fallen nature redeemed
by Christ, “Have mercy on me, O God…for we have sinned. For I am well aware of
my offences, my sin is constantly in mind. Against you, you alone I have
sinned, I have done what you see to be wrong” (Ps. 51:1.4). Just like the first Adam we have fallen, we
are sinners but redeemed in Christ. Thus, in today’s readings we see the
synthesis of the whole history of salvation, all our history: creation- sin –
redemption.
The
first reading from the book of Genesis (Gen.
2:7-9; 3:1-7) in a way points to the future of Christ’s event, for if we
want to grasp the saving significance of Christ’s death and resurrection, we
cannot but make a journey in retrospect, remembering that man is God’s
creation, yet a fallen creature. Indeed, something went wrong somewhere, for man
has become what God intended him not to be. These two great theological truths:
creation and fall are expressed in the book of Genesis in chapters 2 and 3. In
the passage of our first reading, we see the story of Adam and Eve in the
garden of Eden and their eating of the forbidden fruit at the serpent’s
deception. Not only that, there is another creation account in the first
chapter of the book of Genesis that is more theological, for therein there is
an assertion that God created man in his image and likeness. In this later
account, man is the culmination of all
God’s creation. The second chapter
places man more at the centre of creation, therein, God made man and put
him in the garden and surrounded him with all that he needed. However, in both
cases, the theological import is the
same: that is the fact that man occupies a unique place in God’s creation. The
account of the fall of Adam and Eve and the temptation by the devil replicates
the consequences of disobedience. They
disobeyed God and obeyed Satan by eating the forbidden fruit. Maybe we may
begin to imagine a garden with so many trees and at the centre, there is the
tree it’s fruits are forbidden. Rather
this stands as a symbol for a limit that should never be crossed. They
sinned against God, and what is sin? Sin is a free act of man against God’s
project. The result of sin is curse. When we do not listen to God’s word we go
astray and the result is tragic (cf. Dt.
30: 15-20). The essence of the
original sin consists in man’s pretence to realize himself without God. In
disobeying God and taking independence from him, man discovered that he is
naked, that he has lost his dignity.
But God did not abandon man in his disobedience. Human experience confirms the fact that whenever we sin we forget who
we are and what God has done for us.
This
ancient story of creation and fall in the book of Genesis reveals a profound
theological insight. The overriding
message is that man cannot blame God or any evil fate for his plight and condition;
instead man is directly responsible for his actions, because man has made
wrong choices that were not in accordance with his destiny as God created him.
However, these choices and their consequences do not deprive man his
responsibility. As we were taught in Catechism, the original sin, the sin of
Adam and Eve was transmitted to us through our conception and together with it
is concupiscence and disorder that pushes us to evil. We do not sin because someone has sinned before us, but we sin freely,
imitating Adam on our own. And by extension, we can say that when one sins
he or she is for those who come after him or her, what Adam was for that
person, through my actions I can condition those who come after me, to be
slaves or free. Sin in its profound
intension is the attempt to eliminate God, to negate him, in other to put
oneself in His place, as the absolute value. The serpent deceived them:
“You will be like God”. The desire to be like God, to assume His place and to
be the absolute master of one’s destiny and freedom, is the hidden intension in
sin. This is hidden from our spirit, but not hidden from God, for God himself
has said: “I shall climb high above the clouds, I shall rival the Most High.
Now you have been flung down to Sheol, into the depths of the abyss” (Is. 14:14-15). In fact, St. Paul puts
it in a more emblematic manner thus: “Who made you so important? What have you
got that was not given to you? And if it is given to you, why are you boasting
as though it were your own” (1Cor. 4:7).
This is why God reacts to sin, because
it is lie in essence.
The
second reading (Rm. 5: 12-19) could
be seen as the continuation of Adam’s ordeal in the first reading, but also it
complements it, for it balances the fall of Adam with the restoration of man in
Christ. St. Paul speaks of the contrast
between Adam and Jesus. He advances the argument that the sin of Adam and
its consequent death is analogous to the sin of all men and thus the consequent
spread of death to all. But more than that, St. Paul makes an analogy between
Adam and Christ, for he posited that Adam
began a history of fallen mankind that was characterized by sin and death,
while Christ began a new history of mankind characterized rather by liberation,
life and righteousness. However, in his analogy, Christ surpasses Adam,
little wonder the apostle says: “If Adam…how much more Christ”. Be that as it
may, Christ’s achievement is far greater than Adam’s, for we could say that
while Adam introduced sin and death, Christ inaugurated freedom, life and
righteousness. Death is negative, for its dominion enslaved man, but life is
positive, for the dominion of Christ sets free. Christ is our saviour and through him we gained back what we lost in
Adam: our dignity as children of God, he makes us sons and daughters of
God. It is the “yes” of the second Adam
that rectifies the “no” of the first Adam. Indeed, the analogy between Adam
and Christ here serves as bridge between the first reading and the Gospel periscope.
Furthermore, St. Paul meditated on these two events and he offers us an
amazing synthesis, “One man’s offence brought condemnation on all humanity, and
one man’s good act has brought justification and life to all humanity. Just as
by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so by one man’s obedience are
many to be made upright” (vv. 18-19).
St. Paul revealed something of a great
importance, and that is the fact that Adam did not fall only for himself and
Christ did not win only for himself. The disobedience of one implicated
others in sin, while the obedience of the other introduced all to grace. And
till today, man is caught up between these two poles of attraction: with Adam
or with Christ, with sin or with salvation.
The first (sin) is consummated in a garden of delight, between euphoria
and pleasure, but it exposes one immediately in the midst of thorns and
thistles. The second (salvation) instead is realized in fatigue and suffering,
but introduces one in the garden of joy, where angels come to serve winners.
The
passage of the Gospel (Mt. 4:1-4) is
the presentation of the temptation of Jesus by the evil one. This account is
found both in Mathew and in Luke (4:1-13),
although there is a little difference in their manner of presentation of the
temptations, while Mathew has bread-temple-mountain,
Luke has bread-mountain-temple. It does appear that Mathew’s intention was
to bring together the two questions pertaining to Jesus as Son of God. As such,
for Mathew the temptations of Jesus are
messianic in character. On the other hand, Luke’s ordering is suggestive of his desire to emphasize that Jesus is
the new Adam, the antitype of the first Adam, who fell when tempted by the
serpent. As a matter of fact, given that we are reading the Matthean version
with the second and third chapters of the book of Genesis and the fifth chapter
of the letter of St. Paul to the Romans, we
are going to thread the line of St. Luke, therefore, seeing Jesus’ temptation
as the temptation of the new Adam.
The three temptations condense the
three fundamental relations of man:
●Towards oneself (stone or bread) - Concupiscence of the body
●Towards God (God at my disposition)
- Concupiscence of the
eyes
●Towards others (power) - Concupiscence of power
The first temptation was the demand of
the Devil to Jesus to change stone to bread. Even though it is true that bread is good, but the word of God is best.
It is also true that we need “bread” to survive, but what keeps us in being is
the word of God. His “word are spirit and they are life” (Jn. 6:63), so also man “lives of every word that comes out of the
mouth of the Lord” (Mt. 4:4). This
is the temptation to use his power to His material and personal advantage, to
satisfy his hunger, after 40 days of fasting, but the real word that satisfies
is the word of God. Till today we are still faced with the temptation of
turning everything to “bread” just for personal satisfaction. Little wonder,
greed, selfishness and insatiable desires for material things is erupting the
foundation of our world.
The second temptation was the devil’s
attempt to put Jesus to his disposition. He took Jesus up the pinnacle of the
temple, and challenged Him: “If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down
from here; for it is written, ‘He will give his angels charge over you, to
guard you…” And Jesus to the devil, “You shall not tempt the Lord your God.” Here,
the devil asks Jesus for a miracle. The
devil used the written word of God to tempt the Incarnate Word of God.
Peter made a similar request to Jesus at the episode when he saw Jesus walking
on water. “Lord, he said, if it is you tell me to come to you across the water”
(Mt.14:28), and Jesus allowed him,
but after three steps, he became afraid and started to sink. Indeed, miracles
are not necessary for one to have faith. We remember Jesus performed so many
miracles in Galilee and Samaria, yet his people wanted to throw Him down from
the hill in Nazareth (cf. Lk. 4: 22-30).
It is not miracle that gives faith, it
is a supernatural gift. This is the temptation to make God succumb to the
devil’s will, sometimes also we are like the devil, when we want to bend God’s
will to our will, when we want and command God for miracles because we want
them, not because He willed them. Some of us tempt God with: Give me, do that,
resolve this problem etc.
The third temptation was
the Devil’s open challenge to Jesus. He took Jesus up to a very high mountain and
showed Him all the Kingdoms of the world and their splendor, and then the Devil tells Jesus (God) to worship
him. The devil invited Jesus to succumb to his logic, for him to have
everything. What an irony! Here we see
the logic of the devil: “I give you, you give me”. This is the temptation
for power (to have power over others). This temptation for power has dealt with
our present world. This indeed is the exact contrary of God. God in His logic
loves us first and gratuitously too. He loves and gives without asking for
anything in return. The devil’s logic is
“nothing goes for nothing” and God’s logic is “something goes for nothing”.
Jesus in the threefold temptations
teaches us to always put God first in our life. The responses (Man shall not
live by bread alone; you shall not put the Lord, your God to the test; you
shall worship the Lord, your God, and Him alone shall you serve) of Jesus to
the devil manifest that Jesus put God first in everything. Who is first in your
life? These three temptations are the three ways through which man deserts the
way of God: ●temptation of idolizing material things (selfishness), ●temptation
to desire for success and personal prestige, ●temptation to grab power for the
sake of domination. We too, are constantly tempted to deviate from God, but
Jesus indicates to us through his experience a major road in order not to fall
into temptation. We should avoid a type
of an accommodating Christianity that tends to please man, rather than God.
Jesus
was led into the desert by the Spirit, and he was tempted. He felt that there
is an obscure power in the world he has to wage war against. And at the end of
the temptation the devil left him, but St. Luke added: “the devil left him,
until the opportune moment” (Lk. 4:13).
And truly he did return, when instead of the pinnacle of the temple he took him
(Jesus) to the pinnacle of the Cross and says to him: “if you are the son of
God come down from the cross” (Mt.
27:40). In the episode of today’s passage Jesus started his fight against
sin and against Satan the Instigator. Through
his victory over Satan He created a new possibility for us: that is the
possibility of overcoming temptation and sin. He is the antithesis of Adam.
He (Adam), man wanted to be like God;
but Jesus even though God became man to save man from his evil inclination and
desire. St. Paul says of him: “Who, being in the form of God, did not count
equality with God…But he emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, becoming
as human beings are; and being in every way like a human being, he was humbler
yet, even to accepting death, death on a cross” (Phil. 2:6-8). The temptation of Eden has not ended, for there are
still many serpents who continue to lead man astray and make him deviate from
the divine will, but Jesus has opened a new possibility for us, he won Satan
and his temptations in the desert, we too can win him in the desert of our
human existences.
As we
reflect on the episode where the Devil tempted Jesus for three good times, the tempter had a sort of a formula:
“if you are the Son of God, command that these stones become loaves of bread” (v.3); “If you are the Son of God,
throw yourself down” (v.6); “I will
give you all these, if you fall at my feet and do me homage” (v.9). The “if question” was something
recurrent in the life and mission of Jesus, indeed, the part of the struggle he
had to contend with was that of doubt and challenge, even upon the cross: “If
you are the Son of God come down from the cross” (Mt. 27:40). Peter was caught up with the same question, upon
seeing Jesus walk on water, “Lord, he said, if it is you tell me to come to you
across the water” (Mt.14:28). The same question was addressed to him regarding his
identity at the beginning of his public ministry. In our own experiences today,
despite our human frailty and sins, we are invited to put the “if question”
into the hands of God, and allow Him to fill us with the assurance of his presence
and divine grace. In all, Christ and Adam show the two opposite reactions in
face of temptation: Adam, archetype of sinful, evasive, self-seeking humanity
and Christ, archetype of the new God-seeking man, resists temptation even
repeatedly. We are indeed invited to follow the way of Christ in dealing with
temptations and the tempter. Remember do not let the Devil win! We pray earnestly
in this season of Lent that we may experience more deeply God’s mercy, goodness
and love! Amen!!
(Fr. Vitus
Chigozie, SC)
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