The Temptation in the Desert
- Claire Henning
- 58 minutes ago
- 2 min read

From the very beginning, Scripture shows us a familiar human pattern. In the garden, the serpent begins, not with open rebellion, but with a quiet question that introduces doubt. “Did God really tell you…?” What follows is not only disobedience, but a breaking of trust. Relationships strain. Adam and Eve turn inward, covering themselves and hiding from one another and from God. Sin does not simply involve breaking a rule. It wounds our communion, with God and with each other.
Saint Paul reminds us that this woundedness echoes throughout history. Through one man, sin enters the world, bringing with it separation and death. But Paul does not leave us in that place. He points us toward another man, Jesus Christ, whose obedience opens the way to new life. Grace, he tells us, is not limited or fragile. It overflows. Where sin divides and isolates, Christ gathers and restores.
In the Gospel, we meet Jesus in the desert, facing temptation. Unlike Adam and Eve, He does not grasp for control or try to prove Himself. He listens. He responds with the Word of God. Each temptation invites Him to act on His own terms, claim power, or take shortcuts. Each time, Jesus chooses trust and obedience instead. He shows us that faithfulness is not found in winning arguments or asserting strength, but in remaining rooted in God, even in moments of hunger, fear, and deep vulnerability.
These readings speak directly to our moment in the Church today. We gather together with a wide range of experiences, convictions, and ways of seeing the world. When tensions surface, it can be tempting to believe that communion will only be possible once others change, understand our point of view, and come to agree with us.
But we are not called to agreement with one another. We are called to communion. Though diverse, we are invited to the same table, nourished by the same Lord, and held together by a grace greater than our understanding. This communion asks something of us. It calls for humility when we would rather defend ourselves, patience when we feel unseen or misunderstood, and a deep trust that God is still at work among us, even when our communion is strained.
Faith-Sharing Questions
As we begin this Lenten journey, we are invited to ask where God is calling us to deeper trust and obedience. Where might subtle doubts, fears, or attachments be influencing how we see one another? How might Christ be inviting us to choose the path that leads not to division, but to genuine communion?
1. Personal: Where in my life might God be inviting me to surrender my need for certainty or control, and rest more fully in the Holy Spirit’s promptings?
2. Church: What experiences have shaped my level of trust or mistrust in Church leadership, and how do those experiences affect me today?
3. World: Where do I feel pressure in the world around me to react quickly, take sides, or speak harshly instead of responding with patience and restraint?
This Week’s PracticeThis week, practice pausing before reacting, asking quietly, “Lord, help me remain at the table with You and all those you have invited into the banquet.”







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