Lent - A Wake-Up Call
The
season of lent is in fact a wake-up call, a reminder that “man does not
live by bread alone.” There are still higher potentials and
possibilities waiting for us human beings to realize. As Sri Ramakrishna
Paramahamsa once stated, “He is born in vain, who having attained the
human birth, so difficult to get, does not attempt to realize God in
this very life.” Every now and then we need to be reminded of this truth
because we live in a world that is still preoccupied and engrossed in
an unrelenting struggle for survival and sustenance. One may be
surprised and shocked to see that persons and nations who have exploited
others and already amassed more than enough wealth for their own
survival and for their posterity still continue to snatch from the
begging bowls of the less fortunate and keep hoarding up wealth
insatiably. Conversely, there is nothing to be shocked or surprised
about this phenomenon since they are simply following their natural or
basic instincts which can be split into three: the instincts of
survival, possession and recognition. These are of course blind forces.
Unless one consciously swims against this natural current we will be
flowing along this current, and in fact, most of us do. That is why we
need lent, a wake-up call, a reminder to halt, look and be liberated
from the slavery of our basic instincts.
That
is precisely what Jesus does in today’s Gospel – a wrestling with his
three natural instincts for survival, possession and recognition. That
tug-of-war between the natural and the supernatural, the human spirit
and the divine spirit is very dramatically and symbolically presented in
the episode of the three temptations of Jesus. These three temptations
are common to each and every one of us, not just to Jesus. The
temptations that Jesus faced at the commencement of his public life were
not his last either. Concluding the description of the temptation of
Jesus the Evangelist Luke indicates, “When the devil had finished every
temptation, he departed from him for a time” (4:13). Please take note of
it, “for a time”. Luke does not say that the devil, accepting defeat
left, him alone “forever”, no, only “for a time”, only for a short time.
After this convincing triumph over Satan Jesus could not “live happily
ever after” as our fairy tales conclude! On his way Jesus often had to
bump into Satan who approached him in various disguises.
It
is in this respect that many of our “living saints”, God-men and
God-women of our country, try to take us for a ride. They pretend and
even claim that they are beyond weakness and temptations ever since they
were converted, taken-over or possessed by the divine. They act like
power personified, as if nothing can ever shake or allure them. Their
sheepish followers are convinced and adamant that it is so. India
remains a fertile ground for this kind of God-men and God-women because
of the blindness and stupidity of devotees. Some of our God-men and
God-women are attracting devotees even from foreign nations. At the
thresholds of their ashrams and tents devotees of every sort, both
educated and uneducated, rich and poor, young and old, await patiently
for a darsan (vision) and if possible a sparsan (touch). When the darsan leads to sparsan and sparsan
advances to higher or deeper realms of intimate union, in some cases by
deception or by force, some of these devotees open their eyes and
seeing the ugly faces of their idols and cry for help and run for their
dear life. Please don’t ever fool yourself thinking that these things
happen only among some perverted sects and communities. No religion is
exempt from this mad craze after “living saints” and not even a single
religion or Church can claim to be unblemished. Then, who is the blame?
Blame both the arrogance of the God-men and God-women as well as the
stupidity of their followers.
Jesus
is teaching us an important truth. Neither baptism nor confirmation,
nor religious vows, nor ordination would ever safeguard a person from
temptations. Temptations will accompany us till our grave, till we
breathe our last breath. There exist no living saints! As late Nelson
Mandela has said, “I’m not a saint, unless you think of a saint as a
sinner who keeps on trying.” Our present pope Francis also continuously
reminds us that he is a sinner as everybody else is. All of us are
frail, fragile human beings. Anybody who claims that he or she is a
living saint is a liar, a crook, a fraud. There exist only “struggling
saints and trying saints”! Jesus was struggling all through his life,
till his last breath. During his public life he could identify the
cunning voice of the devil speaking through the mouth of his favorite
disciple Peter. Jesus did not think twice to scold him saying, “Get
behind me Satan.” Yes, Satan was setting his snare once again which
Jesus could immediately identify and respond to. Anybody who continues
the struggle to break free from the bondage of our basic instincts is a
“saint”. It is in this sense that St Paul addressed believers as saints.
There are no “living saints” or “sleeping saints” only “struggling and
trying saints”! Lent is a wake-up call. Are we awake? Only we will know
nobody else.
Dr Kurian Perumpallikunnel CMI
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