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February 21, 2010 Catechist Background and Preparation Spend a few minutes reflecting on what these readings mean for you today. Was there a particular reading which appealed to you? Was there a word or image that engaged you? Read the Word in Liturgy and Catholic Doctrine sections. These give you background on what you will be doing this session. Read over the session outline and make it your own. Check to see what materials you will need for the session. The Word In Liturgy An account of Jesus’ temptations in the desert appears in all the synoptic gospels and is taken from one common source by both Matthew and Luke. In Luke’s gospel, the devil’s power amounts to a separate kingdom, in tension with the kingdom of God. Throughout Jesus’ public ministry, and finally at the cross, the conflict between the kingdom of God and the kingdom of the devil continues to be revealed in Luke. The temptations Luke describes would have recalled to his gentile audience the three great temptations: love of pleasure, love of riches, and love of power. More fundamental to the story, however, is its Jewish background, which is found in the Israelite experience of wandering forty years in the desert after the deliverance from Egypt. There they were tested by physical hunger, the lure of idolatry, and the temptation to test God. Led into the desert by the Spirit for forty days, Jesus experiences the very same temptations but responds to each of them out of his deep fidelity to God. He answers the devil’s proposals with the words of Deuteronomy, that passionate work revealing the heart of the Mosaic covenant. He chooses to rely on God’s word, to worship God alone, and to trust God humbly. By responding in this fashion, Jesus reverses the human unfaithfulness that has ever been part of the story of God’s dealing with those whom he chooses and becomes the exemplar of the right response to God’s election. Catholic Doctrine Israel experienced this divine election in the historical events of a loving God who again and again pursued this wayward and insignificant people. As expressed in the Old Testament, the purpose of this special election as the Chosen People is not for their own sake but for the sake of manifesting God’s grace, glory and power to the whole world. Jesus Christ stands at the apex of this historical unfolding of God’s divine election. The New Testament scriptures attest that Jesus is God’s elect. God acts, God chooses, and in so doing, human pride is confounded. So, too, the pride of Satan is overturned. The entire life of Jesus, his ministry, his suffering and death, all point to God and God alone whose reign is overtaking this world. For in Christ, the faithful are gathered up, given membership in this kingdom and presented to God in a new and everlasting covenant. Therefore, Catholic teaching emphasizes that the Church inherits Israel’s election. While we still regard the Jewish people as “chosen” (for how could God go back on his promise?), nevertheless divine providence and grace are opened up in a new way by the coming of Christ.
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