GIVING UP GIVING UP?
Do you find it easy to give up something for Lent, and then to stick with your decision?

By this time of the year, New Year resolutions have either been broken or forgotten. Lent is a time when a new start can be made with them, or new challenges can be set, perhaps with less demanding aims, for example the giving up eating chocolates
(temporarily). But every challenge like this which we set ourselves becomes a temptation and we
can end by giving up giving up.
The practice of giving up something for Lent probably originates from the custom of some Churches to include, as part of the scheduled Lenten readings, the Biblical account of Jesus in the wilderness after His baptism (Matthew 4.1-11, Mark 1.12-13,
Luke 4.1-13). So the act of giving up something for Lent can be seen as a reflection of the deprivation Jesus endured in the 40 days He was out in the desert. This episode in the life of Jesus is often called the temptation of Christ. I suppose the temptation which comes our way in Lent to give up on whatever we said we would give up may seem rather trivial when compared to Christ’s temptations. But all temptations are a challenge to our commitment and self-discipline, and often to our choice between right and wrong.
It is easy to see Jesus’ rebuttal of His temptations as a refusal to do something rather than giving up anything. But what He was doing was giving up the easy way of leadership for the right way for our salvation. There would be times when temptation
would return (Matt.16.21-23; Matt.26.36-39) and He would have to resist the challenge to give up giving up. In His time of testing in those 40 days in the desert, Jesus was not only able to confirm what His ministry was really about but also how He should do it. He gave up the way of popularity (turning stones into bread) for the way of sacrifice. He gave up the way of political power (all the kingdoms of the world) for the way of peace and love. He gave up the way of worldly glory (jumping off the Temple) for the way of commitment to His Father’s plan for our salvation.
And never again, though tempted, did He go back on the way He had chosen. His commitment to the path of humble and obedient service to God was total and, even when He knew He only had a short time to live (Luke 9.51), there was never any consideration of giving it up for those ways of seeking success that He had set aside as not being the right way. During this season of Lent, if you are tempted to give up on what you have chosen to give up, think of Jesus and His resolve not to give up on the difficult way which would lead Him to the Cross because He knew it was the right way to show how much God loves each one of us and to obtain for those who follow Him, acknowledging Him as
Saviour and serving Him as Lord, the forgiveness of our sins and our redemption.








