Mark 1:9-13 · The Baptism and Temptation of Jesus
A Friend in Low Places
Mark 1:9-13
Sermon
by Mark Trotter
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I've just returned from a study break, which I spent in a cabin in northern California, back in the woods, all by myself. It was a wonderful time. Some of you have asked me, "Did you do any fishing?" I am really shocked that you would even ask that question. I was there for study, not for fishing. Besides, the river was too muddy to fish. Up there I listened to country western music, because in that part of the state, that is about all you can get on the radio. I am not a great student of country western music. But those who are tell me that it is a gold mine of theological riches. Somebody gave me a record once entitled, "Dropkick Me Jesus Through the Goal Posts of Life." That pretty much discouraged my looking for any theological wisdom in country western music.

But my secretary, Eleene Myers, and Sharon Wynott, who is the financial manager of the church, have been trying to broaden my appreciation of country western music, so I decided I would listen some more while I was up there. Most of the music that I heard was about disappointment, heartbreak, unfilled dreams, broken promises, anger, and guilt.

All of this was on my mind as I began sermon preparation for the season of Lent, and especially on this text for this morning, the first Sunday in Lent, the story of Jesus' temptation in the Gospel of Mark. Jesus, chosen by God at his baptism. God says, "This is my son; in whom I am well pleased." Then the text says, "The Spirit immediately drove him into the wilderness. He was in the wilderness forty days, tempted by the devil."

Mark tells the story of Jesus' temptation in such way as to recapitulate Israel's history. Israel, chosen by God while it was in bondage in Egypt, and immediately led into the wilderness for forty years. The theologians of Israel, looking back on that event in its history, said that was a time of testing for the nation. So Jesus, chosen by God, goes into the wilderness for forty days and forty nights, to be tested.

That parallel was so important for the early Church, because the early Church, at the time when Mark wrote his gospel, saw itself as still a part of Judaism, still trying to convince relatives and friends that Jesus is the one Israel was expecting. So it was significant that Jesus' life paralleled Israel's.

But there is a better parallel for us, the story of the Garden of Eden, and Adam and Eve tempted by the serpent. We are to read that story as our story. We are to read it as autobiography. Like Adam and Eve, all of us are born in innocence, and with potential for a wonderful life. But at some point along the way of our life, we mess it up. The story of Adam and Eve reveals when that happens. It happens when we reach the age of decision-making, the age of discretion. That is when we lose our innocence. We start independently making decisions on our own. We will make some decisions out of ignorance, and we can't be blamed really for the consequences of those decisions. But we will also make many decisions out of pride, or fear, or hatred, or selfishness, or jealously, or revenge, and there will be consequences to those decisions. Somebody will pay for those decisions. Sometimes we will pay for them. But as often as not, somebody else will pay for them, and that is when we lose our innocence and fall into what the Bible calls "sin."

That is when you start listening to country western music, about heartbreak and sorrow, and disappointment and regret, and guilt and pain. Those are the consequences of the fall.

I notice in country western music there is this constant refrain, "Mama told me there would be men like this." "If I'd only listened to mama, I wouldn't be in the mess I am in today." I think that is probably what Adam and Eve must have said, something like that anyway. If we had only listened to mama, we would still be in the Garden of Eden.

According to the Bible, that is what sin means. Sin means "not listening to God." Sometimes sin looks like disobedience, and that is the moral dimension of sin. Sometimes sin looks like pride, and that is the intellectual dimension of sin. Sometimes sin looks like despair, and that is the spiritual dimension of sin. We refuse to trust God with our lives.

At some point, all of us experience the fall. We fall from innocence into sin, through temptation, and then pay consequences for it. Either we pay it, or somebody else pays it. Wasn't it Gail Sheehy who coined the phrase, "The inevitable crises of adult life." Which is a way of saying, trouble comes to all of us. If you are going to move from childhood into adulthood, that means you are going to move from innocence into sin. We all do.

You can't avoid it. You will make decisions that will bring hurt, or pain, or disappointment, or sorrow, to yourself, or to somebody else, because you have made those decisions meanly, selfishly, arrogantly, rebelliously, to bring about what you want, and not what God wants.

You notice how many stories in literature, literature around the world really, that are about the fall from innocence. Especially in American fiction, the novels we read in school. You remember, Huckleberry Finn, Billy Budd, An American Tragedy, The Great Gatsby, and Catcher in the Rye. All of them begin in innocence, and then temptation in some form or another, and then a fall.

And I think that is so characteristic of American fiction, because from the very beginning, America saw itself as a kind of Garden of Eden. The founding fathers and mothers talked about America in that way, as a place that was unspoiled by centuries of European corruption. That is the American myth. And it is still the myth today. There are still people who come to this country expecting that they will find a new beginning, a whole new life in this country.

We may have been that kind of a country at one time, a new land. And certainly we brought a new form of government to this world. But it's turned out that we are still the same kind of people. Human nature is the same everywhere. At some time, no matter what the place is, there is going to be a fall from innocence into sin, with all of its consequences.

In his wonderful novel, Crossing to Safety, Wallace Stegner defines a beautiful place where everybody got along together, families came together and have a wonderful time. We all know a place like that. Maybe it is a neighborhood that we live in, or used to live in, or more often for families, it is a summer place, where families gather together traditionally over the years, and join each other in love and fellowship. We know such a place.

Stegner said, "That's the place where friendship had its home, and happiness made its headquarters." But Stegner is realistic. He wrote, "There is no Eden without a serpent." He remembers in this idyllic place noticing that there was a snake that periodically appeared. He wrote, "It was not a big serpent, not very alarming, but once we noticed it, we realized that it had been there all along. Even when we recognized it for what it was, it didn't seem dangerous. It just made us look before we sat down."

It's a universal story. It begins with Adam and Eve. It is the story of the passage from innocence into sin, through temptation.

I believe that Bernard Malamud wrote the quintessential American novel on this theme, because it is about baseball, and America's national sport is baseball. The story was called, The Natural. Maybe some of you saw the movie some years ago, with Robert Redford playing the title role of Roy Hobbs.

Roy Hobbs is "the natural." The name itself implies innocence. Natural means "unspoiled." It is the way things are supposed to be. Roy Hobbs is like that. He is like Adam in the Garden. He is like all of us before temptation. He has a life of great promise. In fact, he is born into America's version of the Garden of Eden. He is born on a midwestern farm in Nebraska, the heartland of America, the wellspring of all that we think about as virtue in our civilization.

It is apparent that as a child, Roy Hobbs has enormous baseball talent. His father tries to exploit it, to teach him how to play, and to work with him. Then one day, his father suddenly dies. Coincidentally a lightning bolt, on that very day, strikes a tree on the farm. Roy Hobbs takes a piece of wood from that tree, shapes it into a bat, and takes that bat with him on the rest of his journey, the way a knight takes up a sword to go search for the Holy Grail.

The Holy Grail for Roy Hobbs is to be found in organized major league baseball. Immediately he is tempted by the corruption of the game, by agents, and hangers-on, who try to seduce him. Especially a woman, the classic image of temptation. He rejects her. She takes a gun, shoots him, wounds him. He retreats, leaves the game, goes into obscurity, saying, "Life didn't turn out to be the way I wanted it to be."

But then at the age of thirty four, he makes a comeback. He returns to the major leagues. Once again, temptation confronts him. This time in the form of the owner of the team, who is the personification of evil. He's a man who can't stand the light. He is allergic to light, so he has to be in darkness all the time. He has his office high above the stadium, like a sky box. He sits up there in darkness, and looks out over all that he owns, including Roy Hobbs.

The story comes to a climax during a game. The evil owner sitting up there in darkness, and the temptress now has joined him, because, it is revealed she works for him.

But there is another woman who enters the story, who symbolizes redemption. She is sitting in the stands, behind the home team dugout. She is surrounded by light. She sends a message to Hobbs, a messages that emboldens him, gives him courage to do the right thing.

I won't tell you how the story ends, but I tell you, it is spectacular. But I want you to see this. In that scene, Malamud paints the human condition: Hobbs at the plate, having to make a decision about his life, what direction he will go in, having to decide between good and evil, with temptation on one side of him, and, on the other side, somebody who is for him, who wants to help him.

That is what life is all about. It is as old as Adam and Eve. It says that there are forces inside of you, and outside of you, that will lead you into lives you will regret, lives of pain and sorrow. So don't be naive about this. Don't assume that because you are intelligent, or because you've got an education, that reason is going to lead you safely through this life. Don't be naive. Reason can be bought, or seduced, just as easily, and maybe more easily, than any other human faculty.

That is why Jesus instructed us to pray daily, "Lead us not into temptation," because we will need grace, we will need strength from beyond ourselves, to lead a meaningful, fulfilled and moral life.

Which brings us to the other point of this story. There are not only forces in the world that would "threaten to undo you," which is Martin Luther's way of putting it, but there is also a power in this world that would save you, and strengthen you, and enable you to become, even through temptation, greater than you would ever imagine you could be.

That is what we Christians believe. We believe that Christ is with us, and beside us, to strengthen us, and to lead us. He is like that woman in the stands. Christ has sent a message to you, "I will lead you through the struggles of your life." "I will not leave you desolate," that's the way it is put in the Gospel of John, that beautiful phrase, "I will not leave you desolate, but I will come to you."

But in the Letter to the Hebrews, it is put even more beautifully. In the Letter to the Hebrews, Jesus is given the title of High Priest, because it is the priest who, through the sacrifice, reconciles human beings with God.

But this is no ordinary priest. This priest does not sacrifice an animal, like a lamb. This priest sacrifices himself, and becomes "the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world." Like a good priest, he knows us, he knows all about us, he has been where we have been, he's seen what we have seen, he's endured what we must endure.

So listen. This is the word that is sent to us, to embolden us. "For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect was tempted, as we are tempted, yet without sin. So let us with confidence draw near the throne of grace, that we might receive mercy, and find grace to help in time of need."

Which brings us back again to country western music. My consultants gave me a CD of Garth Brooks greatest hits for my birthday. One of those hits is entitled, "I've Got Friends in Low Places." That title caught my imagination.

The revelation in the Bible is that we have a friend who has been to all of the low places, all those places where we are tempted to be less than who we are created to be, where we are tempted to do those things of which we are not proud, where we are tempted to despair of our life. Those are times of testing. The gospel says that Jesus has been there before us.

"For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with out weaknesses, but one who in every respect was tempted, as we are tempted, yet without sin. So let us with confidence draw near the throne of grace," [through this sacrament of Holy Communion this morning] "that we might receive mercy and forgiveness, and find grace to help in time of need."

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mark Trotter