Day 1

A Lenten Introduction



Matthew 4:1-17, Hebrews 4:14-16, Acts 3:19-21, Isaiah 55:1-13

BY Amanda Bible Williams

After His baptism and before the start of His ministry on earth, the incarnate Son of God walked into the wilderness, no food or drink in hand. He fasted forty days and forty nights, Scripture tells us, and then “the tempter approached him” (Matthew 4:3). Hungry and thirsty and holding no tangible thing of value, Jesus was tempted to take hold of power, to test the Father’s love for Him, to make for Himself a feast of bread to satiate His languishing body. When His human weakness was met with temptation, how did He respond? Using the words of Scripture, He turned to the Father.

Instead of reaching out for what the world would say He needed, Jesus clung to what He couldn’t live without: “He answered, ‘It is written: Man must not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of God’” (Matthew 4:4). Rather than yielding to the devil’s enticements, Jesus yielded Himself to the Father and glorified Him: “Worship the Lord your God, and serve only him” (v.10).

Our culture views empty-handedness as the lowliest of conditions. We are trained to find our worth in usefulness and status, and to seek joy in our possessions. On the off chance we look down to find our hands empty, we quickly scoop up something to hold on to—some bit of work or wealth, some duty or distraction to busy our bodies and entertain our minds. But this hands-full gospel is not the message of Jesus.

Lent is a season where we once again remember that our hope and strength are found in nothing but the cross of Christ. By engaging in daily Scripture reading, prayer, confession, and repentance in these weeks leading up to the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus, we retrain our hearts to embrace the salvation we cannot earn. We came empty-handed when we first gave our lives to Him, and we have nothing of our own as we return to Him now—only what He has freely and graciously given us.

This forty-day walk into the wilderness will bring us face to face with the depth of our lack, our human frailty, and our sin. But it will bring us to the cross, where our High Priest, who modeled perfect dependence on the Father, will show us the cost of our forgiveness in the marks on His body, even as He invites us to receive mercy.

Lent is an invitation to put down everything we have picked up in order to take hold of the only One who can truly satisfy our heart’s deepest longings. It is a call to turn back, and experience a season of refreshing for our souls (Acts 3:19). Come with open hands, and freely receive (Isaiah 55).

Post Comments (367)

367 thoughts on "A Lenten Introduction"

  1. Luna Milne says:

    Ready to repent, refresh, and rejoice in the name of our Lord!

  2. Kayleigh Ethayananth says:

    Reading about the temptations Jesus faced made me see how I face these same temptations daily. I am tempted to put worldly needs above spiritual needs, to question God’s love and power, and to give up on serving him and serve myself instead. Thank you Jesus for overcoming these temptations for me.

  3. Natalie Peterman says:

    Thank you, Jesus!

  4. Megan McCoy says:

    Starting this journey today and I’m looking forward to how much closer it will bring me to knowing Jesus. I can’t wait to start cleansing things from my body and life that I fail to realize on a daily basis I truly do not need.

  5. Olga Letrice Franklin russ says:

    I am embracing this transformation of sanctification during this lent season.

  6. Kay Willims says:

    I’m anxious to see what god is doing in the next season of my life! I’m starting with lent so I can draw nearer to him an let go of the very things that’s blocking what he has for me. Fear anxiety low self esteem I’m ready in Jesus name✨

  7. Tammy Bertelsen says:

    Yes! I love this so much; an invitation to repent, be refreshed and to rejoice in our glorious Lord, to draw near to Him, give Him our thoughts, yield to Him alone.

    I love that we see Jesus here as- a light dawning for those living int he shadow of death (that’s us!), the One who brings the kingdom of heaven near, our great High Priest, sympathetic, faultless, the bringer of refreshment for our souls, provider of all that is good, Holy, the One whose thoughts and ways are higher than mine.
    So good!!!

  8. Steph Surgener says:

    Couldn’t agree more! Been feeling the same way. Excited to see what Jesus has in store for us!

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