On the Second Sunday in Lent of Year A, we
have Matthew’s Transfiguration scene.Three
years ago I
embedded Dr. Brant Pitre’s explanation of Matthew’s Transfiguration, and it’s
well worth going back to watch that.Dr.
Pitre explains the parallels between this scene and that of Moses going up Mt.
Sinai in Exodus chapters 24 and 34.The
point of Matthew’s Transfiguration is that Jesus is the new and greater Moses.
But what I find most fascinating that I don’t
think I heard any of the homilists I surveyed mention is that this scene at the
beginning of chapter 17 comes right after the events of chapter 16.What are the events of Matthew 16 that resonate
here in 17?At the beginning of Matthew 16
Jesus is asked by the Pharisees and Sadducees to show them a sign.Jesus refuses and even says, “An evil and
unfaithful generation seeks a sign, but no sign will be given it except the
sign of Jonah” (Mt 16:4).Later in the
chapter Jesus asks the disciples who they think He is, and Peter gives his
famous, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Mt 16:16).Still later in the chapter, after Jesus
explains He must die and be resurrected, He adds, “For the Son of Man will come
with his angels in his Father’s glory” (Mt 16:27).So in Matthew 16, He tells the Jewish critics
that no sign will be given, but He explains exactly to the apostles what will
come.But do they really understand
it?Not if you read carefully.They need that sign, and in His goodness
Jesus gives the three apostles such a sign in the Transfiguration.
Here is today’s Gospel reading.
Jesus took Peter, James, and John
his brother,
and led them up a high mountain by
themselves.
And he was transfigured before them;
his face shone like the sun
and his clothes became white as
light.
And behold, Moses and Elijah
appeared to them,
conversing with him.
Then Peter said to Jesus in reply,
“Lord, it is good that we are here.
If you wish, I will make three tents
here,
one for you, one for Moses, and one
for Elijah.”
While he was still speaking, behold,
a bright cloud cast a shadow over
them,
then from the cloud came a voice
that said,
“This is my beloved Son, with whom I
am well pleased;
listen to him.”
When the disciples heard this, they
fell prostrate
and were very much afraid.
But Jesus came and touched them,
saying,
“Rise, and do not be afraid.”
And when the disciples raised their
eyes,
they saw no one else but Jesus
alone.
As they were coming down from the
mountain,
Jesus charged them,
“Do not tell the vision to anyone
until the Son of Man has been raised
from the dead.”
~Mt: 17: 1-9
Fr. Terrance Chartier of the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate gives a
fine homily where he alludes to the theology taught from Dr. Pitre’s video.
Fr. Terrance:
“The last lesson from
Mount Taber today is probably the first and most important lesson. It's the
fact that Jesus is the new Moses. He's actually our Moses. Just as Moses led
God's people out of slavery to the promised land, so to Jesus, our Moses, leads
us out of sin and out of the difficulties of life to bring us to a heavenly
promised land…And when Moses went up Mount Sinai, it was said that when he came
down, his face shone with the glory of having been in the presence of God.
Exodus 32:34:29.So his face, Moses's
face reflected the glory of God when whom he had encountered.What does it say in the gospel today?Jesus goes up the mountain. Matthew tells us
his face shone like the sun. Matthew 17:2, it shines like the sun with its own light.”
In the Transfiguration, Jesus opened up His humanity to reveal His
glory.
The Catholic
Truth Society, a British evangelist organization, is providing Lenten
retreat talks from St. John Henry Newman’s sermons, and they provide an interesting
one on this week’s Gospel reading.
Up above I brought the Transfiguration scene into context with the prior
events of Matthew 16.Fr. George Bowen
brings out Newman’s preaching on how the passage following the Transfiguration
shows the dichotomy of the transcendence and glory of the Transfiguration up
the mountain with the grief, pain, and confusion of the earthly world down the
mountain.That scene is the one with the
epileptic boy where the boy’s father asks Jesus, “Lord, have pity on my son,
for he is a lunatic and suffers severely; often he falls into fire, and often
into water.I brought him to your
disciples, but they could not cure him” (Mt 17:15-16).
The contrast between the two scenes is striking.
Sunday Meditation: “His
face shone like the sun and his clothes became white as light.”
Here is a lovely hymn I have never heard of, “Transfiguration,” written
by Brian Wren (lyrics) and Ricky Manalo (music).
"The Night Before Christmas" can be found starting on page 4. Keep
clicking the "Next" link.
###
One last commentary I would like to explore is the
theme of sin set against the background of Christmas.
We are introduced to sin up front when we are
introduced to the character of the devil at the beginning of the story.
Suddenly, from the
opposite direction, another little spot appeared, grew bigger, began to spread,
and was no longer a little spot. A nearsighted man, even if he put the wheels
of the commissar's britzka on his nose for spectacles, still wouldn't have been
able to make out what it was. From the front, a perfect German: the narrow
little muzzle, constantly twitching and sniffing at whatever came along, ended
in a round snout, as with our pigs; the legs were so thin that if the headman
of Yareskov had had such legs, he'd have broken them in the first Cossack
dance. To make up for that, from behind he was a real provincial attorney in
uniform, because he had a tail hanging there, sharp and long as uniform
coattails nowadays; and only by the goat's beard under his muzzle, the little
horns sticking up on his head, and the fact that he was no whiter than a
chimney sweep, could you tell that he was not a German or a provincial
attorney, but simply a devil who had one last night to
wander about the wide world and teach good people to sin. Tomorrow, as the
first bells rang for matins, he would run for his den, tail between his legs,
without looking back.
Gogol’s footnote on
“German” says, “Among us, anyone from a foreign land is called a German,
whether he’s a Frenchman, a Swiss, or a Swede—they’re all German.”Nineteenth century Russian writers have a
reputation of being xenophobic, and we see it here.They seem particularly more prejudiced
against Germans.
So this devil is
introduced as having “one last night to wander about the wide world and teach
good people to sin.”Three points on
this detail.First, the devil is out to
“teach good people to sin.”The root of
the sin comes from the devil.Second, the
“last night” is Christmas Eve, the night before the birth of the redeemer of
sin, Jesus when presumably the devil will not be free to cause sin.All the characters, with the possible
exception of Vakula, commit sins.We
should expect some sort of redemption, and we do.Third, sin is in the foreground of all the story’s
events and is, I would say, a structural element of the story.The subplots all revolve around sin with the
main plot leading to redemption.
The motif of pranks that
run through the story is related to sin.Some of them seem to originate from the devil but some of them
don’t.Oksana is not vain because of the
devil, and the devil doesn’t cause the men to go to Solokha, the witch
prostitute, but given devil’s pranking with the moon and atmosphere, one could
conclude that devil has bewitched the town and spread his sorcery upon the
townspeople.Here’s the paragraph that
suggests that.
So it was that, as soon as the devil hid the moon in
his pocket, it suddenly became so dark all over the world that no one could
find the way to the tavern, to say nothing of the deacon's. The witch, seeing
herself suddenly in the dark, cried out. Here the devil, sidling up to her,
took her under the arm and started whispering in her ear what is usually
whispered to the whole of womankind. Wondrous is the working of the world! All
who live in it try to mimic and mock one another. Before, it used to be that in
Mirgorod only the judge and the mayor went about during the winter in
cloth-covered sheepskin coats, and all of petty clerkdom wore plain uncovered
ones; but now both the assessor and the surveyor have got themselves up in new
coats of Reshetilovo astrakhan covered with broadcloth. Two years ago the clerk
and the local scrivener bought themselves some blue Chinese cotton for sixty
kopecks a yard. The sacristan had baggy summer trousers of nankeen and a
waistcoat of striped worsted made for himself. In short, everything tries to
get ahead! When will these people cease their vanity! I'll bet many would be
surprised to see the devil getting up to it as well. What's most vexing is that
he must fancy he's a handsome fellow, whereas—it's shameful to look him in the
face. A mug, as Foma Grigorievich says, that's the vilest of the vile, and yet
he, too, goes philandering! But it got so dark in the sky, and under the sky,
that it was no longer possible to see what went on further between them.
The darkness seems to
induce sin.Sin, in general, happens out
of sight and is covered up.The motif of
not being able to see or see correctly seems to be associated with this
darkness.Included in the sinful people
are officers of the Church.We see both
the deacon and the headman, which is a sort of position synonymous with a sacristan.Notably the priest is not implicated in
sin.
Upon the return of the
moon, the sin seems to spread more so.
Wondrously the moon shines! It's hard to describe how
good it is to jostle about on such a night with a bunch of laughing and singing
girls and lads ready for every joke and prank that a merrily laughing night can
inspire. It's warm under your thick sheepskin; your cheeks burn still brighter
with the frost; and the evil one himself pushes you into mischief from behind.
Perhaps the switching of
the moon on and off is part of the bewitching.
It is interesting that Vakula’s
effort to obtain the boots for Oksana seems to be inspired from sinful desire.
But just as the blacksmith was preparing to be
resolute, some evil spirit carried before him the laughing image of Oksana,
saying mockingly: "Get the tsaritsa's booties for me, blacksmith, and I'll
marry you!" Everything in him was stirred, and he could think of nothing
but Oksana.
This is a really
interesting passage.It seems this evil
spirit that stirs up the image of Oksana is suggestive of sexual desire.This is the moment Vakula decides not to move
on from Oksana but to try to win her.Was
he compelled by lust here?Given the
marriage and birth of a child at the end of the story and given the story’s
sexual backdrop of the town men going to Solokha, it sounds like the blacksmith
too falls into sinful desire.
It is surprising how much
sexuality is suggested within the story.Look at how the scene where a series of men individually go to Solokha
and each need to hide into sacks as another man shows up.
The devil meanwhile was indulging himself in earnest
at Solokha's: kissed her hand, mugging like an assessor at a priest's daughter,
pressed his hand to his heart, sighed, and said straight
out that if she did not agree to satisfy his passions and reward him in the
customary way, he was ready for anything: he'd throw himself in the water
and send his soul straight to hellfire. Solokha was not so cruel, and besides,
the devil, as is known, acted in cahoots with her. She did like seeing a crowd
dangling after her, and she was rarely without company; however, she had
thought she would spend that evening alone, because all the notable inhabitants
of the village had been invited for kutya at the deacon's. But everything
turned out otherwise: the devil had just presented his demand when suddenly the
voice of the stalwart headman was heard. Solokha ran to open the door, and the
nimble devil got into one of the sacks lying there.
The devil says “straight
out that if she did not agree to satisfy his passions and reward him in the
customary way” he’d drown himself.Of
course that’s an indirect suggestion for sex but isn’t the threat of drowning
what Vakula also contemplates when Oksana rejects him?The scene at Solokha’s then turns into slapstick
comedy as one man after another—first the devil, then the headman, then the
deacon, and then Choub—hide into a sack.
As an aside, I’m confused
by this hiding into sacks.How could it
not be noticeable that a man is in a sack, how could Choub and the deacon
inside the same sack not be aware of each other’s presence, and how can Vakula carry
a sack with two men in it on his back?Are
the sacks magical?This seems to defy
realism.Am I missing something?
But Vakula’s desire for
Oksana is not necessarily sinful, and he does use that desire later by manipulating
the devil, obtaining the boots as a love token for Oksana, and ultimately
marrying her.Does Vakula fall into sin
by forcing the devil to accommodate his needs?Vakula himself seems to think so.When he goes to Patsiuk to learn how to get the devil’s help, Vakula
utters, "My sinful self is bound to perish! nothing in the world helps!
Come what may, I must ask for help from the devil himself.”
The subplots continue in
parallel to Vakula’s use of the devil to get him to St. Petersburg, meet with
the Cossacks, and go to the tsaritsa where he gets her to give him her
booties.The subplots are rich with sinful
events: infidelities, vanities, and a comic fight between wives of the town
men.
###
Kerstin Comments:
Manny wrote: "... the little horns sticking up on
his head, and the fact that he was no whiter than a chimney sweep."
The build-up to this detail takes up most of the paragraph. It is such skillful
writing.
Manny wrote: "Gogol’s footnote on “German” says,
“Among us, anyone from a foreign land is called a German, whether he’s a
Frenchman, a Swiss, or a Swede—they’re all German.” Nineteenth century Russian
writers have a reputation of being xenophobic, and we see it here. They seem
particularly more prejudiced against Germans."
I take no offense :-)
Unfortunately there is no whitewashing the fact that a lot of wonky thinking
came out of Germany. We Germans sometimes call ourselves the country of poets
and thinkers (Land der Dichter und Denker) ...obviously with mixed results.
My Reply:
My hunch on why Russians in the 19th century were anti
Germans is more geo political. Of the western countries, they were the closest
to Russia and perhaps they felt threatened. Even though it was the French
Napoleon that invaded them! Perhaps being so close makes the differences feel
more immediate. But yes a lot of good and flakey writing has come out of
Germany...lol.
Frances Comment:
Isn’t it enriching to read or listen to elegant
language? I worry that children going through our school systems today aren’t
being introduced to great reading and the beauty of language. I’d never read
Gogol before this, but he certainly belongs alongside Dostoyevsky, Pasternak,
Chekhov, Pushkin and other great Russian writers.
My Reply to Frances:
I can only go with what they assign my son in high
school. The works are pretty good (The Great Gatsby, My Antonia, Shakespeare,
etc.) but I don't know what's being discussed in the classroom. Does he get
them? Thinking back I don't think I really got literature in high school. It
was in college where it began to click.
The only Gogol work before this that I've read was his
short story "The Overcoat." That's supposed to be very famous. On
your list I've read several Dostoyevski and several Chekhov. You could add
Tolstoy and Turgenev to the list of Russians I've read. I have not read
Pasternak nor Pushkin.
Kerstin’s Reply to
Frances:
It is so important! I find that on the whole,
literature of previous centuries far more linguistically beautiful than what
has been produced since World War II. Everything in our lives since then has
become more and more functional. This is especially true for the arts, all
flourish, embellishment, or playfulness has disappeared. It's all rather drab.
It doesn't matter where you look, architecture, furniture, dishes, penmanship.
The color grey features prominently everywhere. No wonder language suffers, there
is no beauty to comment on.
My Reply to Kerstin and
Frances:
Let me give you my experience from college on
evaluating literature. I had a class in literature on 17th century English
literature. That is the age of Milton, John Donne, the Metaphysical poets, and
the Cavalier Poets. All great poetry as you would read in college classes
today. Were they famous in their own age? Only probably Milton. For a term
paper in that class I did a study of a poet of the time who wrote what might be
seen as an epic poem in a scope similar to Milton. For the life of me I can't remember
that poet's name but he was popular in his day. I thought it would be a good
idea. He was terrible. What a mistake I made in reading that work and writing a
term paper on it. He was horrible and I suffered through the whole thing. I
wish I could find that paper or at least remember who the poet was but I can't.
Here
is a list of all the published poets of the 17th century.
That poet is probably one on the list. Who knows who
they are. Their works have not survived time. I doubt they are any good or we
would know of them.
This gets to the point that you can't tell until after
we're long gone who in any contemporary publishing circle is worthy of lasting
and being revered. Today we consider the 17th century English period to be a
rich era, but it was not always so. Until about 100 years ago the 17th century
did not have a great reputation, and if you look only at the popular names you
might say it was right not to assess it well. If you cherry pick the great
writers then you would say it was a great age.
###
I found the women
fighting to be so wonderfully comic that I just want to post a section.
With Vakula off in St.
Petersburg obtaining the tsarista’s booties for Oksana, the women of Dikanka argue
over what has happened to Vakula.
"He drowned! by God, he drowned! May I never
leave this spot if he didn't drown!" the weaver's fat wife babbled,
standing in the middle of the street amidst a crowd of Dikanka women.
"What, am
I some kind of liar? did I steal anybody's cow? did I put a spell on anybody,
that you don't believe me?" shouted a woman in a Cossack blouse, with a
violet nose, waving her arms. "May I never want to drink water again if
old Pereperchikha didn't see the blacksmith hang himself with her own
eyes!"
"The
blacksmith hanged himself? just look at that!" said the headman, coming
out of Choub's house, and he stopped and pushed closer to the talking women.
"Why not
tell us you'll never drink vodka again, you old drunkard!" replied the
weaver's wife. "A man would have to be as crazy as you are to hang
himself! He drowned! drowned in a hole in the ice! I know it as well as I know
you just left the tavern."
"The
hussy! see what she reproaches me with!" the woman with the violet nose
retorted angrily. "You'd better shut up, you jade! Don't I know that the
deacon comes calling on you every evening?"
The weaver's
wife flared up.
"The
deacon what? Calls on whom? How you lie!"
"The
deacon?" sang out the deacon's wife, in a rabbitskin coat covered with
blue nankeen, pushing her way toward the quarreling women. "I'll show you
a deacon! who said deacon?"
"It's her
the deacon comes calling on!" said the woman with the violet nose,
pointing at the weaver's wife.
"So it's
you, you bitch!" said the deacon's wife, accosting the weaver's wife.
"So it's you, you hellcat, who blow fog in his eyes and give him unclean
potions to drink so as to make him come to you?
"Leave me alone, you she-devil!" the
weaver's wife said, backing away.
"You
cursed hellcat, may you never live to see your children! Pfui! . . ." and
the deacon's wife spat straight into the weaver's wife's eyes.
The weaver's
wife wanted to respond in kind, but instead spat into the unshaven chin of the
headman, who, in order to hear better, had edged right up to the quarreling
women.
"Agh,
nasty woman!" cried the headman, wiping his face with the skirt of his
coat and raising his whip. That gesture caused everyone to disband, cursing, in
all directions. "What vileness!" he repeated, still wiping himself.
"So the blacksmith is drowned! My God, and what a good painter he was!
What strong knives, sickles, and plows he could forge! Such strength he had!
Yes," he went on, pondering, "there are few such people in our
village. That's why I noticed while I was still sitting in that cursed sack
that the poor fellow was really in bad spirits. That's it for your
blacksmith—he was, and now he's not! And I was just going to have my piebald
mare shod! . . ."
And, filled
with such Christian thoughts, the headman slowly trudged home.
Hysterically funny! I
would love to see this dramatized.I
would surmise that the actual words in Russian of “hussy” and “she-devil” might
be more vulgar than the translation.And
the spitting makes this scene so visually vibrant.It should be noted that the apparent death of
the blacksmith fills the headman with “Christian thoughts.”Remember the headman is a religious position
akin to a sacristan, but he was one of the men—should I call them “johns”?—who hid
in a sack at Solokha’s.Certainly the
devil induced nightlife has not filled the town with any Christian thoughts.This, however, is the turn in the story that
goes from the sin of Christmas Eve to the redemption of Christmas Day.
###
I would also like to
explore the redemption that takes place at the end of the story.Up until the wee hours in the morning of
Christmas Day the story has been filled with the enchantment of the devil on
the townsfolk and the manifestation of sin.The only exception has been Vakula who with the exception of having desires
for Oksana, which is not necessarily sinful, and manipulation of the devil’s
power, which when intended for the devil’s defeat also might not be sinful.His apparent death has caused the town to
suffer sorrow and gloom, and, as we saw with the headman, a return to Christian
thoughts.We see Vakula’s “death” as
casting another enchantment, a holy enchantment.During the night, during an agitated sleep,
Oksana has a conversion of heart.
But what if he had left with the intention of never
coming back to the village? There was hardly such a fine fellow as the
blacksmith anywhere else! And he loved her so! He had put up with her caprices
longest! All night under her blanket the beauty tossed from right to left, from
left to right—and couldn't fall asleep. Now, sprawled in an enchanting
nakedness which the dark of night concealed even from herself, she scolded
herself almost aloud; then, calming down, she resolved not to think about
anything—and went on thinking. And she was burning all over; and by morning she
was head over heels in love with the blacksmith.
That sudden change is comic!Comedy works on sudden changes such as
this.Tragedy and realism require more
than just abrupt turns.Even the whole
town is changed the next morning as everyone’s focus becomes attending
Christmas liturgy.
Morning came. Even before dawn the whole church was
filled with people. Elderly women in white head scarves and white flannel
blouses piously crossed themselves just at the entrance to the church. Ladies
in green and yellow vests, and some even in dark blue jackets with gold
curlicues behind, stood in front of them. Young girls with a whole mercer's
shop of ribbons wound round their heads, and with beads, crosses, and coin
necklaces on their necks, tried to make their way still closer to the
iconostasis. 14 But in front of them all stood the squires and simple muzhiks
with mustaches, topknots, thick necks, and freshly shaven chins, almost all of
them in hooded flannel cloaks, from under which peeked here a white and there a
blue blouse. All the faces, wherever you looked, had a festive air.
The nature of town
decorum is noticeably different.Late
night pranks and vulgarity are now replaced by Church attending piety.The church is filled even before dawn.The elderly ladies are piously dressed in
white blouses and wear head scarves—which would be analogous to veils in the
Latin Church, and upon entering cross themselves.The young girls wear a “mercer’s shop of
ribbons wound round their heads,” which I take is also characteristic of a
local devout custom, and augmented with wearing of “beads, crosses, and coin
necklaces on their necks.”The men too
are clean shaven and piously dressed.More significantly they all “make their way still closer to the
iconostasis,” one of the most religious features in an Eastern Church. The iconostasis
is analogous to the rood
screen in the Latin Church, which seems to have developed
later than the barrier in the East and were eliminated per the Council of Trent
and replaced with altar rails to make the liturgy “much more accessible to lay
worshippers.”To an Eastern church goer,
“being
near the iconostasis can enhance the sense of connection to
the sacred mysteries being celebrated.”“This proximity can foster a deeper sense of reverence and participation
in the sacramental life of the church.”
Next we see Vakula
returning home in the middle of the night and giving the devil some rough
justice.
Still more swiftly in the remaining time of night did
the devil race home with the blacksmith. Vakula instantly found himself by his
cottage. Just then the cock crowed. "Hold on!" he cried, snatching
the devil by the tail as he was about to run away. "Wait, friend, that's
not all—I haven't thanked you yet." Here, seizing a switch, he measured
him out three strokes, and the poor devil broke into a run, like a muzhik who
has just been given a roasting by an assessor. And so, instead of deceiving,
seducing, and duping others, the enemy of the human race was duped himself.
This would not be sinful
in the least.There are plenty of images
of St. Michael the Archangel stepping on the devil’s neck and thrusting a spear
into him.In fact, I think violence
against demons is part of spiritual warfare.
But Vakula is so weary
from his night flight to St. Petersburg and back that he oversleeps and misses
the Christmas Day liturgy.When he wakes
up and realizes, he feels extremely guilty.
"I slept through matins and the
liturgy!"—and the pious blacksmith sank into dejection, reasoning that
God, as a punishment for his sinful intention of destroying his soul, must have
sent him a sleep that kept him from going to church on such a solemn feast day.
However, having calmed himself by deciding to confess it to the priest the next
week and to start that same day making fifty bows a day for a whole year, he
peeked into the cottage; but no one was home.
He decides to go to
Choub’s house where after expiating for his sins he will ask for Oksana’s hand
in marriage.But Choub, thinking Vakula
had died, is shocked when he sees him.
Choub goggled his eyes when the blacksmith came in,
and didn't know which to marvel at: that the blacksmith had resurrected, or
that the blacksmith had dared to come to him, or that he had got himself up so
foppishly as a Zaporozhye Cossack. But he was still more amazed when Vakula
untied the handkerchief and placed before him a brand-new hat and a belt such
as had never been seen in the village, and himself fell at his feet and said in
a pleading voice:
"Have
mercy, father! Don't be angry! Here's a whip for you: beat me as much as your
soul desires, I give myself up; I repent of everything; beat me, only don't be
angry! You were once bosom friends with my late father, you ate bread and salt
together and drank each other's health.
Vakula has become a “resurrected”
Christ-figure, and in the context of a comic story implies redemption for
himself, the townsfolk, and for their sins of the night before.In true comic fashion, the story ends with a
marriage.We even have a glimpse to a
year later where we see Oksana with her child and Vakula’s artwork for the
church and on the iconostasis.
But His Reverence praised Vakula still more when he
learned that he had undergone a church penance and had painted the entire
left-hand choir green with red flowers free of charge. That, however, was not
all: on the wall to the right as you entered the church, Vakula had painted a
devil in hell, such a nasty one that everybody spat as they went by; and the
women, if a child started crying in their arms, would carry it over to the
picture and say, "See what a caca's painted there!" and the child,
holding back its tears, would look askance at the picture and press against its
mother's breast.
Vakula is redeemed and provides
the means for everyone’s redemption.The
devilry of the early part of the story is replaced by the piety of the
ending.Gogol ends the story with the
image of Madonna and child that had been the subject of Vakula's painting.What a wonderful story with depth, charm, and
complexity.
###
Frances Comment:
Thanks, Manny. Have you read Dr. Zhivago? If so, then
you’ve read Pasternak. I love Chekhov. He’s been described as an atheist, but
his short story “The Student” is one of the most beautiful Christian stories
ever.
My Reply:
I have not read Dr. Zhivago. I have not heard of
"The Student." Unfortunately it's not on the internet. Perhaps I'll
buy a collection of his short stories, if I ever get back on Amazon again.
We are now into the First Sunday in Lent in
this Year A of the lectionary.Jesus has
been baptized by His cousin John, and the Spirit leads Him into the desert.I’m rather intrigued by the differences
between the Gospel narratives on the forty days in the desert.First there is no mention by the account in John’s
Gospel, although there are indirect references to the three temptations (see Jn
6:26, 31,2:18, and 6:15).Mark’s Gospel is
only two verses long (1:12-13), has no mention to the specific temptations, and
interestingly is the only one who mentions Jesus among wild beasts.Both Matthew’s and Luke’s (Lk 4:1-13) Gospels
have full and similar accounts but they switch the order of the second and
third temptations.At the end of the
temptations, Matthew mentions angels ministering to Jesus with a sense that
Jesus has defeated the devil while at the end of Luke’s the devil departs to
abide his time.
Here is today’s Gospel reading.
At that time Jesus was led by the
Spirit into the desert
to be tempted by the devil.
He fasted for forty days and forty
nights,
and afterwards he was hungry.
The tempter approached and said to
him,
“If you are the Son of God,
command that these stones become
loaves of bread.”
He said in reply,
“It is written:
One does not live on bread alone,
but on every word that comes forth
from the mouth of God.”
Then the devil took him to the holy
city,
and made him stand on the parapet of
the temple,
and said to him, “If you are the Son
of God, throw yourself down.
For it is written:
He will command his angels
concerning you
and with their hands they will
support you,
lest you dash your foot against a
stone.”
Jesus answered him,
“Again it is written,
You shall not put the Lord, your
God, to the test.”
Then the devil took him up to a very
high mountain,
and
showed him all the kingdoms of the world in their magnificence, and he said to
him, ""All these I shall give to you,
if you will prostrate yourself and
worship me.”
At this, Jesus said to him,
“Get away, Satan!
It is written:
The Lord, your God, shall you
worship
and him alone shall you serve.”
Then the devil left him and, behold,
angels came and ministered to him.
~Mt: 4: 1-11
Fr. Geoffrey Plant gives a full explanation of Matthew’s passage.
Fr. Geoffrey goes into great detail on the differences between Matthew’s
and Mark’s versions.
Fr. Geoffrey:
“The Gospels of
Matthew and Mark both make a striking claim about how Jesus
enters the desert.
Matthew tells us that
Jesus “was led by the Spirit.” He uses the verb ἀνάγω
(anagō).
But Mark puts it far
more strongly: “the Spirit drives him out into the wilderness.”
The verb Mark uses is
ἐκβάλλω (ekballō). It is a word that normally means “to cast
out,” “to force out,”
even “to expel.” It is the same verb Mark later uses for driving
out demons.
Mark wants us to feel
the urgency — the Spirit thrusting Jesus into a place of
testing.
But Matthew wants us
to see something different: He chooses a gentler verb,
ἀνάγω (anagō), which
means he “was led up,” and he does this for a purpose.
He portrays Jesus
entering the desert in calm, deliberate obedience. He shows
us a Lord who does
not resist God’s call, nor hesitate before hardship, but
freely steps onto the
path the Father has set for him. By softening Mark’s
forceful language,
Matthew is not contradicting him; he is revealing another
facet of the mystery.
Jesus is not pushed into the wilderness against his will.
He goes there
willingly — with the same steadfast trust that once led Israel
through the desert.
Matthew’s Gospel consistently presents Jesus as
composed, sovereign,
and guided rather than driven. And that is why this
moment matters: the
journey into the desert is not a detour but a chosen path,
embraced freely, as
the beginning of his mission for our salvation.”
I think it’s important to note that Matthew’s account shows Jesus in
full deliberative choice.
Cardinal Blasé Cupich gave a simple but yet insightful pastoral homily.
Cardinal Cupich:
“Notice that each one
of these temptations begins with the word “if.”If you are the son of God, if you will prostrate yourself and worship
me, it is the way the evil one works to create doubt in us about God. the kind of
doubt that was given to our first parents in the garden that in fac God really
wasn't being straight with us, wasn't being honest with us. And so in each on of
these temptations, there is a corresponding conversion that we're called to.”
“And so today, as we
begin this Lenton season, let us not allow the evil one to create doubt in us
by that if question, but rather have a conversion that allows our lives to be
bred for others that gives us the patience to let God work in us and others by
God's own time. and that rejects an illusion of
happiness and
security by possessions, realizing that the Lord has always been with us and
everything he has is ours.”
Sunday Meditation: “Get
away, Satan!It is written: The Lord,
your God, shall you worship and him alone shall you serve.”
What better Lenten hymn than “Lord, Who throughout These Forty Days” performed
by the Holy Childhood Schola Cantorum at the Church of the Holy Childhood,
wherever that is.