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Contributors:

Mark Shea
Mark Shea is Senior Content Editor for Catholic Exchange and a weekly columnist for the National Catholic Register. You may visit his website at http://www.mark-shea.com/ check out his blog, Catholic and Enjoying It!, or purchase his books and tapes here.

Rich Leonardi
Rich Leonardi is a recurring CE author and author of the blog Ten Reasons, The Observations of a Seditious Catechist

Karen Edmisten
Karen Edmisten is a freelance writer and homeschooling mother of three. Visit her online at her blog, which she updates whenever her kids aren't looking.

The Kitchen Madonna
The author of five published histories, Virginia Fisher, a.k.a. the Kitchen Madonna, has also written for EWTN and has served as a director of religious education. These days, she blogs at kitchenmadonna.blogspot.com as she works on her forthcoming book, Kitchen Madonnas Everywhere.

Elizabeth Foss
Elizabeth Foss is a freelance writer from northern Virginia. To visit her blog click here.

Tom O'Toole
Tom O'Toole is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame and lives in Elmhurst, Illinois. His book Champions of Faith: Catholic Sports Heroes Tell Their Stories is available through Amazon.com. To purchase an autographed copy, or to have Mr. O'Toole speak at your function, contact him at tacotoole@aol.com or through his website at www.fighting-irish-thomas.blogspot.com

Mike Foss
Mike Foss is a homeschooled senior in highschool. To read more from Mike, please visit his blog at www.ebeth.typepad.com/van_goal.

Kevin Schmiesing
Kevin Schmiesing is a research fellow at the Acton Institute, where he blogs for the PowerBlog. He is also executive director of CatholicHistory.net, a site dedicated to the history of Catholicism in the United States. Author of Within the Market Strife: American Catholic Economic Thought from Rerum Novarum to Vatican II, Kevin's interests include American and Church history, Catholic education and social thought, and the history of business and economics.

William Luse
William Luse has written articles for Touchstone, The New Pantagruel (now defunct but still online) and Orson Scott Card's Ornery.org. He teaches English at Valencia Community College in Orlando, hosts the website Apologia, and is married with in two daughters. With many years experience as the only male in an otherwise female family unit, he has concluded that the mystery of the feminine nature is destined to remain so.

Donna-Marie Cooper O'Boyle 
Donna-Marie Cooper O'Boyle, mother of five and Lay Missionary of Charity is the author of the best-selling books, Catholic Prayer Book for Mothers (Our Sunday Visitor, Oct. 05), The Heart of Motherhood: Finding Holiness in the Catholic Home (Crossroad, Oct. 06), and Prayerfully Expecting: A Nine-Month Novena for Expectant Mothers (Crossroad, April 07). All were endorsed by Blessed Teresa and blessed by Pope John Paul II. They are available through her website and she offers daily inspiration at her blog: "Daily Donna-Marie: A Dose of Inspiration." Her work can be seen in several magazines and Catholic websites.

Patrick O'Hannigan
Patrick is a husband and father whose essays have appeared in American Spectator Online and other places. He lived and worked in California for more than ten years, but writes now from North Carolina. His blog, The Paragraph Farmer, is found at: paragraphfarmer.blogspot.com.

Brian Killian
Brian Killian is a freelance writer and a columnist for the Atlantic Catholic. Read more of his writings at his blog, Noetic Muse.

Temptation in the Desert


posted by: Karen Edmisten

Ten years ago, when Anne was four years old, and Betsy was a toddler, I had my first inkling of real Lenten temptation.

Oh, yes, previously, I'd been tempted to eat chocolate, or to have a juicy burger on a Friday, but all that seemed quite benign in comparison to a moment at Mass, on the first weekend of Lent ten years ago.

I was a relatively new Catholic and Atticus was not even thinking of becoming Catholic. But, I was certain this would be the year that I'd be a shining, stellar example to him of patience, faith and God's love. I would let Christ shine through me so clearly, so incredibly, that my husband could not help but be touched, and could not help but run to the nearest priest and beg to be brought into the Church.

I breezed through Ash Wednesday, not even missing the things I'd given up. I was too focused on being so good, for Atticus's benefit.

On the first weekend of Lent, we went to Mass on Saturday night. Atticus came along, because he'd made a Lenten promise of his own: although he wasn't considering Catholicism, he offered to attend Mass with me every week during Lent.

Normally, he didn't go at all. And, since he stayed home, he usually kept our very little girls with him, and I zipped off to Mass alone. Though I longed for us to be "one of those families -- the ones who are together at Mass", I enjoyed the experience of entering fully, quietly into the Mass, without distractions.

So, there we were, on the first weekend of Lent, all of us. "Together at Mass."

And, I felt impatient.

And uncomfortable.

And angry.

I'd had my daughters at Mass plenty of times, but this weekend it suddenly seemed different. They were acting like ... ummm, like ... little girls. Energetic little girls. They were squirmy, and loud and fussy.

Atticus was oblivious to their antics. It was impossible for me to be oblivious. I was frustrated with all of them, including Atticus. Maybe especially Atticus.

The church was crowded, stuffy and warm. I could barely hear the readings.

But, then, I heard the priest say this:

"... led by the Spirit into the wilderness for forty days, to be tempted by the Devil."

And I was struck, perhaps for the first time, by two realities:

1. We are not alone in the desert.

2. We are being actively tempted.

We are not alone.

We, too, are led by the Spirit into the wilderness of Lent, but, we are not abandoned. And, we are not expected to do this of our own strength.

To be tempted by the devil.

Yes, certainly, I had always thought of Lent as a time of temptation, but I thought of it as "me against myself." I thought that if I had enough resolve, if I were "good enough," it would be easy.

But, suddenly, in that stuffy church, surrounded by fussy children and a husband who didn't want to be there, I realized that I'd been tempted to impatience with the very thing I longed for with my whole being.

"My husband's conversion, and family togetherness at Mass, will mean this?," I'd been thinking. Unpleasantness, distraction, impatience, anger? The desire to be here alone?

I had been tempted away from the good, away even from the desire to be the clear window through which Atticus could see Christ.

Only by God's grace was I able to see the moment for what it was:

Temptation in the desert.

But, I was not alone.

The moment was redeemed by that realization. I reclaimed my longing for my husband's conversion. I knew it would mean giving up "entering fully into the Mass alone," but it would also mean gaining a new way of entering fully into the Mass: as a family. A loud, messy, imperfect, distracted, and sometimes-frustrated family.

I knew then that many more temptations would pop up on this rocky road of my continuing conversion. I knew that there were forces at work actively trying to discourage me from praying for my husband's reception into the Church (which did not come until two years later.) I knew that these things would be, (and would feel) stronger during times of fasting, when I was hungry -- both literally and spiritually -- and vulnerable.

Lent can still be hard.

But, I know I'm not alone.

And that has made all the difference.

(This post also appears on my blog .)



Donna-Marie Cooper O'Boyle www.donnacooperoboyle.com   www.donnamariecooperoboyle.blogspot.com www.donnamarieembracingmotherhood.blogspot.com

Karen,

 

Thank you for sharing this beautiful reflection about your own journey through the "desert." I know that your words which so honestly describe some of the tempataions throughout Lent will touch hearts reminding them that they are not alone and will also inspire them to stay close to our Lord and His Holy Mother.

 

God bless and love,

Donna






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