Romans 9:30--10:21 · Israel’s Unbelief
Did God Really Say...?
Romans 10:8-13
Sermon
by Steven E. Albertin
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Today is "Temptation Sunday." Every year on the first Sunday in Lent we focus our attention on the story of the temptation of Jesus. It is a story that has captured the imagination of Christians for centuries. They have sought to portray in art what it must have been like for Jesus to have been tempted by the devil. The picture on your sermon outline this morning portraying this ugly, grotesque, devilish creature is typical of the way the evil one has been portrayed. If the devil looked like this, you would never miss him. You would never be fooled. You would never fall into temptation.

We all know that is not the case. If the devil was so easily identified, then no one would ever succumb to his wiles and temptations. We look at people or pictures and we may choose to ask ourselves — Who are we looking at? One person may be looking straight ahead as the other whispers into the ear of the first person. Who is the face looking straight ahead? Is that Jesus? Or is that someone else? Is it one of us? Who is that other face standing off to the side? That must be the devil. That face looks so common and ordinary that it could be the face of just about anyone you might meet on the street.

That is exactly the point. When the devil shows up in the pages of scripture, his physical appearance is never described. It is unimportant. There is no mention of any ghoulish features, no horns, no pitchfork, no long tail, no monstrous fangs or claws that we would expect to see on the devil in a late night horror flick. Instead we can expect to meet the devil in the ordinary and every day. Sometimes the devil could even appear in the attractive and the beautiful. For example, in the Genesis 3 story of the temptation of Adam and Eve the serpent, whom we are so quick to identify as the devil, is actually described as "more crafty than any other wild animal that the Lord God had made." In the New Testament when Jesus angrily speaks, "Get behind me, Satan," it is spoken not to some threatening enemy but to one of the innermost circle of his disciples: Peter. Where is the monster with the horns and pitchfork?

What identifies the presence of the devil is exactly what we see portrayed in many pictures. He speaks. When he speaks he always begins by saying: "Did God really say...?" Whether it was in the Garden of Eden or to the Israelites wandering in the wilderness or to Jesus in today's gospel, it is always the same. To Adam and Eve in the garden he says, "Did God really say ... you shall not eat from any tree in the garden?" After Jesus had been in the desert for forty days he says, "Did God really say ... you are the Son of God?" After Jesus had predicted that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer and die, the devil again speaks but this time through the voice of Peter, one of Jesus' most trusted disciples. "Did God really say ... you had to go to Jerusalem and suffer and die to be the messiah?" When the devil speaks, he attacks his prey by sowing the seeds of doubt and trying to undermine the trustworthiness of God by implying that some how, some way God is pulling a fast one, that God is not completely on the up and up, that God is not keeping his promises.

"And because God is not trustworthy, you need to take things into your own hands. If God won't be God, then you need to be God and you do that by taking charge of your own life. You do that, Adam and Eve, by eating that forbidden fruit and deciding for yourselves what is good and evil instead of always having to trust God, who doesn't seem to be all that trustworthy in the first place.

"Because God is not trustworthy, Jesus, you need to take matters into your own hands and show the world that you are strong and powerful and in control of your own life. Did God really say ... back there in the waters of the Jordan that you were ‘the Son of God, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased?' If that is what he really said, then why did he send you out into the desert for forty days? After that kind of treatment, aren't you hungry? Why not turn these rocks into bread? Then I might believe that God really said that you were his beloved son. Then even you could believe that you were his son.

"Did God really say ... that you are his son? Prove it. Jump off the pinnacle of the temple and see if God's angels will catch you. After all, God himself says in his word, ‘He will command his angels concerning you to protect you.' Do that and I will believe you. Even more importantly, Jesus, do that and you could believe God.

"Did God really say ... that this world is his? Jesus, you can't possibly believe that. God is not being straight with you. Just look at this world and what a mess it is. It obviously is in my hands. But being the generous fellow that I am (unlike your Father in heaven), I will give this world to you, if you will just worship me."

In each case there is the lie, the insidious lie, that God can't be trusted, that you are on your own, that you have got to take matters into your hands and look out for yourself. You can't count on God anymore.

"Did God really say...? No, of course he didn't. Now, what are you going to do about it, Jesus, Steve, (call out names of people in the congregation)?"

In today's reading, Paul addresses the same issue with the Romans. They, too, are grappling with the trustworthiness of God. The problem was that God's chosen people, the people to whom he had made such an incredible promise, the Jews, had rejected Jesus as the Messiah. They had turned their backs on the very God who had chosen them. As a result many Christians had come to the conclusion that the Jews were no longer God's chosen people. They had rejected their election and were lost.

That posed a very troubling problem. Did that mean that God had reneged on his promise to the Jews? Had God now turned his back on his own people? If God had rejected the people who had formerly been his people, what assurance is there that the same thing wouldn't happen to them? God had made a promise to Abraham and his descendants that would never be revoked. Now, if God has chosen to reject the Jews for their failure to accept Jesus as the Messiah, how can they be sure that God someday might not do the same thing to them? How can anyone be sure of God's promises, if those promises can be revoked?

You can just hear between the lines of Paul's letter the voice of the tempter, sowing the seeds of doubt and peddling his lies to the Romans. "Did God really say ... that he would keep his promises? If he did, he lied, because he hasn't kept them. Look what has happened to the Jews. The same thing could happen to you. Can you afford to trust a God like that? Isn't it time to take matters into your own hands?"

Is our situation any different? The devil is going to peddle his lies. You can count on it. And you can be sure that he isn't going to show up in any talking snake in the garden or in some horned beast wielding a pitchfork. Instead he shows up in the familiar voice of an old friend, our beloved spouse, our own children, the leader that we trusted, the company that had promised so much. "Did God really say ... did you really think that you were someone special? Well, what about that pain in your chest, that lump that wasn't supposed to be in that part of your body, that pink slip you thought you would never get, that coworker who got the promotion that was supposed to be yours, that raise you deserved but didn't get, a society in which the rich get richer and the poor get poorer, where children die too young, where terrorist bombs rip apart the lives of the innocent?"

Maybe we aren't so special after all. How can we trust God in a world like this? So we take matters into our own hands and make choices shaped not by what is right but by what we can get away with. Who cares what it does to others? We are now in charge. We have the knowledge of good and evil, that is, our version of good and evil and in our version we are always good. We are always God.

It gets worse. The devil uses God's own words to poison our faith. Imagine that! The devil quotes scriptures! In today's gospel the devil used God's word against Jesus to undermine his trust in God. When he took Jesus to the pinnacle of the temple and dared him to jump and then to a high place to show him the kingdoms of the world and promised to give them to Jesus, he quotes scripture, God's own word, two times, to undermine Jesus' trust in God. He quotes God against God.

Doesn't the devil do the same thing to us? He uses God's own words to lead us into temptation and undermine our trust in God. God's word says, "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God" (Mark 10:25 RSV). We are all in trouble when we realize that a rich man is anyone who has enough money to be afraid to lose it. And who of us doesn't do that?

God's word says, "You have heard that it was said to the men of old, ‘You shall not kill.' But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother or sister (is a murderer) shall be liable to judgment" (Matthew 5:21-22 RSV). We are all murderers. We all have hands covered with blood. We are all liable to God's judgment.

God's word says, "Not everyone who says to me ‘Lord, Lord' shall enter the kingdom of heaven" (Matthew 7:21). We thought our confession of faith and our flawless recitation of the Creed for memory mattered, but now we can't even be sure of that.

The voice continues to speak softly, gently, persuasively, "Did God really say all that? But you know the truth. You know that you can't count on God. You are on your own. It is time to do what is best for you." And so we reach out and eat of the forbidden fruit. Before we have a chance to cover our shame and nakedness, God comes walking in the Garden in the cool of the evening and he is no longer our friend. He has become our enemy. We have to run and hide or we will surely die.

When the Romans felt vulnerable, unsure, uncertain, and afraid, when we feel vulnerable, unsure, uncertain, and afraid ... because the devil has had his way with us, like he has had his way with every human being before us, Paul is determined that we not be left standing there, hiding in the bushes, embarrassed and ashamed. He responds with the bold words of today's reading. Like an attorney rushing to our defense in a court of law, Paul quotes God's word against the devil and his ilk who use God's word to threaten and terrify us.

But the evil one won't give up easily. "Did God really say ... that you were special, that you could trust him, that you are his chosen people, his beloved sons and daughters? That can't possibly be true. Just look at your life. You ought to be ashamed of yourself. Look at the skeletons in your closet. Look at the wounds you have inflicted on your family. Look at the failures that litter your past. Look at your pride, your arrogance, the way you gossip and destroy the good name of others. Look at your love of money."

Paul will not let the devil have the last word. "Yes, God really did say that! God really did say that we are special. The promise of your baptism remains. The forgiveness of sins you receive at his table will never be revoked. His desire to forgive is eternal." Paul, too, can quote God's word: "No one who believes in him will be put to shame" (Isaiah 28:16) and "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved" (Joel 2:32). Clinging to these promises, Paul is certain that we can count on God no matter what.

However, the devil persists. He will not give up easily. "Did God really say that? How do you know that for sure? How can you trust one word of God and disregard the other?" Paul boldly responds by pointing to Jesus, the one who went before us. He is the word of God, the last word of God, to which we cling. He resisted the wiles and temptations of the devil and we don't. We fall for them, hook, line, and sinker. Even on the cross the voice continued to whisper into Jesus' ear, "Did God really say ... that you are the Son of God?" Three times on the cross Jesus again is tempted. This time it is not about turning rocks into bread or jumping off the temple or worshiping the devil, but it is about daring to believe that God is his Father even though he is suffering this brutal fate. Three times the "father of lies" speaks: "If you are the Son of God, come down from the cross." Again Jesus resists. He had already refused to turn rocks into bread, jump off the temple, and worship the devil. He continues to do what he has always done. He believes. He refuses to come down from the cross. He would rather die. Even in death he still believes. His God has not lied to him. "Father, into your hands I commit my spirit."

When he died, he looked like a fool, just another misguided martyr. But "on the third day" he was raised from the dead. His faith was vindicated. God said, "That's my boy!" Jesus had staked his life on that promise. He was not mistaken. He was no fool.

So also for us. "Did God really say ... that you, the people of this church, are the beloved sons and daughters of God, that you are the apple of his eye, that your sins are forgiven?" We hesitate. We wonder. Is it true?

Listen to Paul: "The word is near you, on your lips and in your heart." Go ahead. Say it. Confess it. Confess this faith and you will never be put to shame. God did not let Jesus down. God will not let you down. You will never be embarrassed for the faith that is "on your lips and in your heart."

The old Reformation hymn puts it well.

A mighty fortress is our God,
A sword and shield victorious ...

Though hordes of devils fill the land
All threatening to devour us ...

Let this world's tyrant rage ...
His might is doomed to fail ...
God's Word forever shall abide,
No thanks to foes who fear it;

For God himself fights by our side
With weapons of the Spirit.
Were they to take our house,
Goods, honor, child, or spouse,

Though life be wrenched away,
They cannot win the day,

The Kingdom's ours forever!1

The evil one whispers, "Did God really say...?" And before he can finish his sentence, we shout, "Yes, he did!" Amen.


1. "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God," words by Martin Luther, ca 1529. In the public domain

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter: But!, by Steven E. Albertin