Enjoy free domestic shipping on every purchase. Thank you!

Pope Francis on Lent: Jesus is with us, even when we’re tempted

Pope Francis highlighted Jesus’ 40-day journey in the desert, where he is tempted by the devil, as an example for the faithful during Lent.

“Jesus too was tempted by the devil, and he accompanies us, every one of us, in our temptations,” Pope Francis said on Sunday.

The 85-year-old pontiff reflected on the Gospel of the first Sunday of Lent to the crowd in St. Peter’s Square in Rome ahead of the Angelus, a Marian prayer. The faithful gathered to pray with the pontiff, including many who waved the flag of Ukraine, a country that he expressed solidarity with during Russia’s ongoing invasion.

During his Angelus address, Pope Francis examined Jesus’ interaction with the devil.

“Twice the devil addresses him, saying: ‘If you are the Son of God…,’ he began. “He is thus proposing to him to exploit his position: first to satisfy the material needs he feels, hunger, then to increase his power; and, finally, to have a prodigious sign from God.”

“It is as if he were saying, ‘If you are Son of God, take advantage of it!’” Pope Francis added.

The devil, he said, uses similar tactics with human beings.

“How often this happens to us: ‘But if you are in that position, take advantage of it! Don’t lose the opportunity, the chance,’ that is, ‘think of your benefit,’” he said of the devil’s deception.

This “seductive proposal,” he continued, “leads you to the enslavement of the heart: it makes us obsessed with the desire to have, it reduces everything to the possession of things, power, fame.”

He examined how Jesus “opposes the attractions of evil in a winning way.”

“How does he do this?” he asked. “By responding to temptations with the Word of God, which says not to take advantage, not to use God, others and things for oneself, not to take advantage of one’s own position to obtain privileges.”

“[T]rue happiness and true freedom are not found in possessing, but in sharing; not in taking advantage of others, but in loving them; not in the obsession of power, but in the joy of service,” he explained.

He emphasized Jesus’ wording with the devil.

“Jesus does not converse with the devil: he never conversed with the devil,” the pontiff stressed. “Either he banished him, when he healed the possessed, or in this case, when he has to respond, he does so with the Word of God, never with his own word.”

The faithful, he said, should do likewise.

“Brothers and sisters, never enter into dialogue with the devil: he is more cunning than we are,” he warned. “Cling to the Word of God like Jesus.”

He told the faithful to “be vigilant” against the devil who can appear “with sweet eyes” and “with an angelic face.”