The ordinary warfare of every soul — and the very arena of our sanctification.
The First Degree · tentatio
“Watch and pray, that you enter not into temptation. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.”Matthew 26 : 41
Temptation is the common inheritance of every Christian. It is not sin. Our Lord Himself was tempted in the desert, and by that He sanctified the very ground on which we now stand. To be tempted is to be alive in the spiritual combat; to consent is another matter entirely. The saints teach us that the enemy cannot force the will — he can only suggest, allure, and provoke. The battle is won or lost in the moment of consent.
Because it works from within our own desires and weaknesses, temptation is the most ordinary and the most constant of the enemy's assaults. It rarely announces itself. It flatters, it reasons, it wears the appearance of good. For this reason the spiritual masters counsel vigilance above all — the habit of watching the first movements of the heart before they harden into deeds.
The Church has long identified three fonts from which temptation flows. Knowing their origin helps the soul to name what it faces.
The disordered values around us — vanity, greed, the applause of men, the pressure to conform to what is contrary to God.
Our own wounded nature and its disordered appetites, weakened by original sin and inclined toward comfort and self.
The personal enemy who studies each soul and tailors his suggestions to its particular weaknesses.
The remedies are not extraordinary; they are the ordinary means of grace, faithfully used. The devil is not overcome by cleverness but by fidelity — the small, daily acts of a soul that keeps close to God.
Especially in the moment of trial. A short, fervent invocation — the name of Jesus, a plea to Our Lady — breaks the spell of the suggestion.
Frequent Confession heals the wounds temptation exploits; the Eucharist strengthens the soul against them.
Guarding the eyes, the ears, and the imagination — refusing entry to what feeds the temptation before it takes root.
The saints did not always stand and argue. Often the holiest response is simply to flee the occasion — to turn away at once.
God permits temptation for our growth and never allows more than we can bear with His grace. The tempted soul is not abandoned.
A word of consolation
Feeling temptation strongly is not a sign of weakness or of God's displeasure. Often the soul that is closest to God feels the assault most keenly, precisely because the enemy fights hardest for what he is losing. Peace does not mean the absence of temptation, but the presence of grace within it.
St. Gemma Galgani, our patroness, knew this warfare intimately. The devil tormented her with fierce suggestions and even physical assaults, yet she clung to the Passion of Christ and was never overcome. Her example teaches that temptation, borne with trust, becomes the very instrument of holiness.