Let's Get it Right

Lent is a season of 40 days, but if you count the days from Ash Wednesday, when Lent begins, to Easter Saturday, when Lent ends, it is more than the 40 days that Lent is supposed to be.
The reason for the difference is that the Sundays in Lent are not included in the 40 days. Lent was a period of fasting and abstinence but, because Sunday is always a reminder of the day of the resurrection, the Sundays were not counted as part of the Lenten season – good news for those who give up chocolate for Lent and are still tempted by it as you can sneak a piece on Sundays!
One of the main themes of Lent is the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness immediately after His baptism in the River Jordan by John the Baptist. Before Jesus embarked on His ministry, He took time out to make sure He got it right; not only what He had to do but how He should do it. So He spent time alone to think things through with prayer and fasting.
He knew that His purpose was to fulfil the will of His Father for the salvation of men and women, but the big problem was how to get men and women to follow Him. In the loneliness of the wilderness, Jesus was faced with difficult choices (Matt.4.1-13). He could win people by offering them plenty, or pleasure, or by taking political power – but He rejected all of these ways.
To supply the basic needs for everyone (turn stones into bread [v.3]) would make life comfortable for them but not guarantee they would follow His teaching. Some people today claim they will ‘save the world’, or at least solve the present economic and social problems, but a ‘better world’ requires more than this.
To provide spectacular entertainment (jump off the highest building in the capital and not get hurt [v.5-6]) would make some people who saw it excited and happy, just as the modern media tries to do 24 hours a day. It may attract attention, but it doesn’t do anything to help people to live better lives or to solve their problems.
To take over political power, by whatever means (all the kingdoms of the world will be yours [v.8-9]), would excite many with its possibilities of position, prestige and control over people. It is easy to name leaders of nations today who choose this way and often end up as dictators, ignoring the needs of their people. Jesus knew this would do nothing to win hearts to the way of truth.
In rejecting all these, Jesus chose the way of service and sacrifice which committed Him, ultimately, to the cross, which is where the season of Lent leads. In love for us He came, and lived and died so that, in knowing His love, we might love Him in return and live in the assurance of His love (John 3.16).
It is all about getting it right – in terms of our ambitions and the way in which we seek to fulfil them. In particular, that in the ‘wilderness’ of this life, we make the right choice, not only of the One whom we serve but also the way in which we serve Him.
Let the Sundays in what could be the rather sombre season of Lent be a reminder that Jesus got it right – for you and for me.








