Our Lord stressed humility, telling us that we must become humble like little children or we cannot enter the kingdom of heaven. After exposing the pride of the Pharisees, in the Gospel today, he teaches, “Whoever exalts himself shall be humbled, but whoever humbles himself shall be exalted."
The Lord didn’t simply teach humility, he lived humility. The divine Word, emptied Himself and was born a human babe in a poor stable at Bethlehem. As a baby, he was a Refugee in Egypt. He lived in the obscure village of Nazareth. He had the menial job of a carpenter. During His public ministry, Jesus had nowhere to lay His head. Paul writes to the Philippians, “He humbled Himself even to death on a cross, the death of a slave.”
St. Francis of Assisi said: “Every day, Jesus humbles Himself just as He did when He came from His heavenly throne into the Virgin's womb; everyday He comes to us and lets us see Him in abjection, when He descends from the bosom of the Father into the hands of the priest at the altar. He shows Himself to us in this sacred bread just as He once appeared to His apostles in real flesh.”
The Lenten journey is one of humility. We began Lent sprinkling our foreheads with ashes while hearing the words, “Remember man, you are dust, and to dust you will return.” If our Lenten observances of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving are to help conform us to Christ, they certainly will help us grow in humility.
We are to give alms without the blowing of trumpets, pray behind closed doors, and fast without show. We are to shun the spotlight, turn away from seats of honor, and take up the washbasin to wash the dirty feet of our neighbor, and to do so without hope of earthly repayment or notoriety. We are to broken, shared, and poured out like ordinary bread and ordinary wine.
As the Lenten Eucharistic preface states: the Father wills that our self-denial should give Him thanks, humble our earthly pride, contribute to the feeding of the poor, and so help us imitate Him in his kindness.”
May this Lent help us grow in humility, by decreasing our instincts of self-aggrandizement and self-promotion, that we might truly learn to love and serve others for their own sake, for the glory of God and salvation of souls.
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That our Lenten prayer, fasting, and almsgiving may humble our earthly pride and bring about conversion and renewal within the Church.
For all those preparing to enter into Christ through the saving waters of Baptism and those preparing for full initiation this Easter, may these final Lenten weeks bring about purification from sin and enlightenment in the ways of holiness.
For those who have fallen away from the Church, who have become separated through error and sin, for those who reject the teachings of Christ, for their conversion and the conversion of all hearts.
For those experiencing any kind of hardship or sorrow, isolation, addiction, or illness: may they experience the healing graces of Christ.
For all who have died, and for all the poor souls in purgatory, and for X. for whom this Mass is offered.
Grant, we pray, O Lord, that your people may turn to you with all their heart, so that whatever they dare to ask in fitting prayer they may receive by your mercy.
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