FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT - A
FASTING HEALS OUR
MIND
Why did Adam and Eve eat the
fruit of the tree in the middle of the garden, the forbidden fruit? Were they
hungry? Were they starving? Were
they deprived?
Far from that! Our first parents
would seem to be the most fortunate of all human creatures. Look at the first
reading (Gen 2 and 3). They had
everything they needed – food, animals, and an opulent space in the garden of
the Lord. They certainly were not
deprived of anything, let alone of nourishment and food.
Adam and Eve were not
hungry. No, they were greedy! Once they learned from the serpent the
secret of the tree of life, the tree of knowledge, they were desirous of
possessing it, even if they had not need of it. They were greedy for power, for recognition, for more!
At the start of Lent, we are
reminded of a trait we have all inherited from our first parents, that of
greed. Most important of all, we are given the solution God proposes to counter
this negative and destructive trait.
In Genesis, we see two people who want more, even if they do not need
more. In the Gospel, we see the
Lord Jesus hungry for forty days and yet refusing to transform the stones into
bread. “One does not live on bread
alone…” (Mt. 4:4)
The solution to our greed is
fasting. Fasting heals our mind for greed starts in the mind and not in the
stomach. Our body needs only as
much as it truly takes to survive.
But our mind tells us that we cannot be completely happy with just the
basics.
We need that extra burger. We
want that extra rice. We must have
the latest Iphone. We must possess the newest Ipad. We must consume our energy on computer games, cell phone
texting, movie marathons and buffet banquets. We must have all these pleasures in order to be happy. But do we really need them? We don’t. It’s plain for all to see.
But our mind is commanding us to crave, to salivate for more.
In the fasting of Jesus, we see
that even a hungry person can say no to the most delectable feast if the motive
is not right, if the occasion is not proper, if the act will run counter to the
will of God.
Fasting is therefore not a
punishment of the body, a deprivation, a self-inflicted penalty. Fasting is a
remedy to correct the mind and to teach us to desire only what is good,
necessary and helpful for our neighbor and ourselves.
As we begin this Lent, let us
join Jesus in his fasting. Let us
ask ourselves what food, item, commodity or activity, consumes us most and
makes us burn with unhealthy desire of greed. Like Jesus, may we ask the Father to give us the grace to
say no to these things that make us slaves, so that we can say yes to freedom,
love and service.
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