Friday, February 20, 2026

What is the invitation for us today?


Artist: Kramskoy - Jesus in the desert



The First Sunday in Lent 2026 

February 22, 2026

www.johnpredmoresj.com | predmore.blogspot.com

 

Sirach 15:15-20; Psalm 119; 1 Corinthians 2:6-10; Matthew 5:17-37

 

Let us spend a moment in the Garden of Eden before we get to the Desert. We imagine Eden to be idyllic, a place of care and plenty, a time in our lives in which we easily allowed God to provide for us. It was beginning of God’s plan for humans on the Earth, a plan that was marked by beauty and communion. Humans came from inanimate dust that was created by God and divine life was breathed into it. We were made humbly and yet we were spiritually exalted. Every human being therefore carries the breath of God, which means we are to respect the dignity of each human person today. We were given boundaries to live by, and yet, we were designed for enlightenment. Could it be that, from the very beginning, we are supposed to expand our consciousness? Was this always part of the plan? After all, all of creation is still evolving. 

 

          Knowing that we are built to strive for greater knowledge, we experience temptation, just as Jesus did. For Jesus, this temptation came from God, and it was to clarify his experience of trust. In his first test, at his point of physical vulnerability, Jesus was tempted to take control of his own needs rather than to trust God’s plan for him. Jesus showed us that trust precedes gratification, and his real hunger was to realize that God abided by him. In the second test, Jesus teaches us that faith does not impel us to prove anything. He learns that spiritual strength lies in not testing God, it is having one’s life testify to God through daily actions. Jesus was called to obey God, not to presume to act on behalf of God. The third test is that hardest one of all. Jesus was tempted to worship success, status, political gains, or approval from others. He reminds us the making idols is easy and a daily practice and can immediately resolve some huge problems, but he remains committed to God as an act of worship. Jesus chose obedience to God rather than assume real power. He shows that he rightly worships God.

 

          In today’s world, we see religion is falsely used as a means to gain or to exert power. This is not faith in God. It is the worship of human power and glory. Many people use religious words and piety and devotional practices to speak for God, and some gain many followers. Politicians, religious leaders, and lobbyists use a “fear-based” spirituality to win people over to their position, and many times, people use sin language to control behavior. Ideologies such as religious fundamentalism, nativism, neo-traditionalism, and religious nationalism, and prosperity theology shape faith and culture today, and there is a tendency to replace power for God. All this stands in contrast to the example of Jesus in the Gospel. All this stands in contrast to the “God is love” spirituality of Jesus and Scripture.

 

          What is the invitation for us today? We can begin by taking increased time for silence and prayer to get to know about this God that Jesus teaches us. We need to make dates with ourselves, spend time with ourselves. We want to experience that type of friendship that Adam and Eve would have had with God – harmonious, trusting, comfortable, thankful for the divine generosity. We want to experience the trust of Jesus in God – knowing that God saw him, knew him, and understood him. We can know that these temporary temptations come from God for our benefit so we can learn how to worship authentically. With out human freedom, we want to continue to evolve and to expand our consciousness so that we grow in wisdom and to know that this is part of obeying God. We want to test those boundaries, search for God’s vital voice, and to discover how to trust in this complex environment. To stay faithful is to keep choosing God when something else feels easier. And when can always be consoled as Jesus did when those temptations ended. Angels came to minister to him. In other words, God will find some way to console you, to remind you of your goodness, to tell you that you are loved, and to thank you for the person you are becoming. 

 

 

 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

A Lenten Blessing . . .



 May you be found by God when your path is obscured by the ashes of your life. When the contentment of the present is disturbed and broken by the failures of the past, may the God of beginning again become known to you. When the ashes of what once was threaten to cover you, may the God of New Fire fan into flame the hidden embers that lie within. May this rekindled energy light the way for others who walk with you. May the God of New Fire bless you. --Maxine Shonk, OP

Monday, February 16, 2026

Slowing into Lent!!

 

Fasting & Feasting

Lent is more than a time of fasting, it can also be a joyous season of feasting.
Lent is a time to fast from certain things, and to feast on others.

Fast from judging others
       
Feast on the Christ dwelling in them
Fast from emphasis on differences
       
Feast on the unity of life
Fast from apparent darkness
       
Feast on the reality of light

Fast from thoughts of illness
       
Feast on the healing power of God
Fast from words that pollute
       
Feast on words that purify
Fast from discontent
       
Feast on gratitude


Fast from anger
       
Feast on patience
Fast from pessimism
       
Feast on optimism
Fast from worry
       
Feast on Divine Providence

Fast from complaining
       
Feast on appreciation
Fast from negatives
       
Feast on affirmatives
Fast from unrelenting pleasures
       
Feast on unceasing prayer

Fast from hostility
       
Feast on peace
Fast from bitterness
       
Feast on forgiveness
Fast from self-concern
       
Feast on compassion for others

Fast from personal anxiety
       
Feast on trust

Fast from discouragement
       
Feast on hope
Fast from acts that tear down
       
Feast on acts which build up

Fast from thoughts that weaken
       
Feast on promises that inspire
Fast from idle gossip
       
Feast on purposeful silence
Fast from problems which overwhelm
       
Feast on prayer that is supportive

(Sharing of other Fast from . . . or Feast on . . .)

Closing Prayer:

God, we honor the Mystery of your presence in us.  We celebrate through feasting and fasting your Indwelling Presence in our daily lives.  You are here today in ways we did not know.  We cherish your presence in our lives as we journey through life.  We receive your joy in the midst of our sorrows.  We receive your love in the midst of our fears and we receive your light in the midst of our darkness . . .

And so we pray:

May there always be a little light in our darkness.

May there always be a little faith in our doubt.

May there always be a little joy in our sorrow.

May there always be a little life in our dying.

May there always be a little hope in our sadness.

May there always be a little courage in our fear.

May there always be a little slow in our hurry.  Amen.                       

  (Adapted from Song of the Seed by Macrina Wiederkehr)

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Mardi Gras Prayer

 



Blessed are you, Lord God of all creation,
for it is from your goodness that we have this day
to celebrate on the threshold of the Season of Lent.

Tomorrow we will fast and abstain from meat.
Today we feast.
We thank you for the abundance of gifts you shower upon us.
We thank you especially for one another.
As we give you thanks,
we are mindful of those who have so much less than we do.

As we share these wonderful gifts together,
we commit ourselves to greater generosity toward those
who need our support.
Prepare us for tomorrow.
Tasting the fullness of what we have today,
let us experience some hunger tomorrow.

May our fasting make us more alert
and may it heighten our consciousness
so that we might be ready to hear your Word
and respond to your call.
As our feasting fills us with gratitude
so may our fasting and abstinence hollow out in us
a place for deeper desires
and an attentiveness to hear the cry of the poor.

May our self-denial turn our hearts to you
and give us a new freedom for
generous service to others.
We ask you these graces
with our hearts full of delight
and stirring with readiness for the journey ahead.
We ask them with confidence
in the name of Jesus the Lord.  (Creighton University)


Praying Lent:

https://onlineministries.creighton.edu/prayer-spirituality-resources/praying-lent



Pre-Lenten Poem Ponderings . . .

 

Gather Me to Be with You

O God, gather me now to be with you as you are with me.
Soothe my tiredness; quiet my fretfulness; curb my aimlessness;
Relieve my compulsiveness; let me be easy for a moment.

 + + +  
O God, gather me to be with you as you are with me.
Forgive me for claiming so much for myself that I leave
no room for gratitude; for confusing exercises in self-importance
with acceptance of self-worth;
+ + +
For complaining so much of my burdens that I become a burden;
For competing against others so insidiously that I stifle celebrating
them and receiving your blessing through their gifts.
+ + +
O God, gather me to be with you as you are with me.
Keep me in touch with myself, with my needs,
my anxieties, my angers, my pains, my corruptions,
that I may claim them as my own rather than
blame them on someone else.
+ + +
O God, deepen my wounds into wisdom; shape my weaknesses
into compassion; gentle my envy into enjoyment,
my fear into trust, my guilt into honesty,
my accusing fingers into tickling ones.
+ + +
O God, gather me to be with you as you are with me.
(From: Guerrillas of Grace by Ted Loder)

A Lenten Reflection

 

Praying Lent:

https://onlineministries.creighton.edu/prayer-spirituality-resources/praying-lent




Lenten Psalm of Longing by Ed Hays

I thank you, O God, for the warming of the winds that brings a melting of the snow, for daylight hours that daily grow longer and richer in the aroma of hope.

Spring lingers beneath the horizon as approaching echoes of Easter ring in my ears.

I lift up my heart to you, Beloved, in this season of Lent that gently sweeps across my sluggish and sleeping heart, awakening me to a deeper love for you.

May the wind of the Spirit that drove Jesus into the desert, into the furnace of prayer, 
Also drive me with a passion during this Lenten season to enkindle the fire of my devotion in the desert of Lenten love.

Birds above, on migratory wings, signal me to an inner migration, a message that draws me Homeward bound on Spirit’s wings to the heart of my Beloved.

May I earnestly use this Lenten season to answer the inner urge to return.
(Prayers for a Planetary Pilgrim)

Befriending our inner joy and gratitude . . .

 


Nothing is more practical

than finding God,

that is, than falling in love

in a quite absolute, final way.

 

What you are in love with,

what seizes your imagination,

will affect everything. 

It will decide what will get you out of bed in the morning, what you will do with your evening, how you will spend your weekends, what you read,  who you know, what breaks your heart, and what amazes you with joy and gratitude.

Fall in love,

stay in love

and it will decide everything.

 

Pedro Arrupe, s.j.

(1907-1991)