Luke 22:39-46 · Jesus Prays on the Mount of Olives
Don't Fall
Luke 22:39-46
Sermon
by Timothy W. Ayers
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After New Year’s Day an office worker decided to go on a diet. She did fairly well for about a week then she started to think about her one guilty pleasure. It was a cream filled donut from a certain bakery she passed on the way to work. For years she had stopped there regularly to get coffee and a cream filled donut. Not every day but a few times a week. On this one particular morning as she was getting dressed she had a craving for one of the donuts but at the same time she wanted to be strong. And since she was a Christian woman she decided to pray for the strength to get by.

She was still praying as she got into her car. She prayed, “Lord, I do want a donut but if it is your will that I have one please have a parking spot right in front of the door. If there is one then I know you want me to have a donut.”

Later as she walked into the office carrying her box of donuts, a co-worker said. “Louise, I thought you were on a diet?” Louise answered and told her story of her prayer that if God wanted her to have a donut there would be a parking spot right in front of the door.

The co-worker asked, “And was there a spot right in front of the door?”

Louise answered, “Praise the Lord! On my seventh time around the block there was a parking spot open in front of the door.”

Yes, that was a humorous story for some of us and probably a true story for a few others but it illustrates what Jesus was talking about to his disciples in our gospel reading today. Before Jesus slipped off to pray he told his disciples to pray so they would not fall into temptation. In fact, he said it twice because they needed to hear it twice. They weren’t praying while they waited they were sleeping. The three missed the Lord’s time of prayer and they missed his anguished time of speaking with the Father because they were asleep. So, Jesus told them again, “Get up and pray so that you will not fall into temptation.”

Looking at this passage you may be tempted to say, “I’ve tried that and I still felt tempted.” True, you may be. You may even be tempted in the midst of your prayer. Temptation comes when we are weakest and when we are strongest. As long as we are in our bodies, in the flesh, we will be tempted. There is nothing new and nothing special about that. So how does prayer keep us from falling into temptation when a temptation hits? We often have no control over the moment we are tempted. Unless you draw away completely from the world and lock yourself away from worldly and fleshly influences you will never avoid temptation.

What Jesus was instructing them to do was to pray in order have the strength not to fall into temptation. Louise’s story is the perfect example of this. She was tempted. She prayed. That first time driving past the bakery was just temptation. It was the second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh time she passed before she found the opening parking spot that was the “falling into temptation.”

From the other gospels, we know that Jesus was praying for about an hour while the disciples slept. Jesus had prophesied that Peter would deny him three times in the hours to come. In Peter’s mind, it was a done deal. He would never deny Jesus. He was adamant. But he was wrong. Peter even knew what his temptation would be and still he didn’t understand the relationship between prayer and his strength to not fall into temptation. So, when temptation came he was spiritually weak and he fell.

Prayer is a weapon against the fall. Temptation comes from all sides, from all places, and attacks us when we least expect. Jesus was giving them an instruction that they would learn and use for the rest of their lives.

When tempted, how do we deal with it? First Corinthians 10:13 gives a plan that should be followed. It says, “No temptation has overtaken you except what is common to mankind. God is faithful; he will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear. But when you are tempted, he will also provide a way out so that you can endure it.”

According to the apostle Paul we must first realize that temptation is going to come. Even if you put one at bay another will raises its ugly little head. It is common for every one of us. Then know absolutely that God is faithful and will strengthen you. He will not allow the temptation to be so great that you cannot bear it.

God, while strengthening you also provides a way out. When he does, don’t hesitate. Run, flee, move on, all while crying out “feet don’t fail me now!” Why? Because temptation can be powerful and once you slip then you will slide. So, run, baby, run.

I need to caution you that when we speak of temptation we often think of something vile or physical but each person has those areas that if we fall into it, tremendous damage can be done to our lives and the lives of others. One pastor told his story. He had never fallen into temptation with a woman, wasn’t gluttonous, and didn’t skim from the church coffers. What he had was explosive anger.

Throughout his childhood and teen years, it was uncontrollable. Once it manifested, it was like trying to put Jello® back into that little box it came out of. The endorphins shot through his body like a drug and like any drug he would explode easily again and again once the anger was released.

He had ruined different careers, different relationships, and different opportunities by quick anger. Seeing what it was doing to his life, he prayed, and then looked for the ways out. As he examined those moments of embarrassing anger that usually ended in broken objects and cowering loved ones, he found a common thread. First, he did it to control a situation that had gotten out of control. Second, he exploded to hide his impending failure. Thirdly, he exploded out of the frustration of not being perfect.

He knew why and he also knew how to handle it. He had to flee. One of his biggest frustrations was handyman work. He, his brothers, and his cousins, joked that the handyman gene wasn’t passed down to their family. For this pastor, every endeavor with a tool led to frustration and frustration led to anger. He told this story.

“I needed to put together a shelf to hold some books. I bought a cheap snap together shelving unit made from hard plastic. I should have known the moment it said, easy to assemble, that I was in for a battle. Since I know how frustrating working with tools can be for me. I only had a hammer and a screwdriver available in the house. The shelving unit only required half my tools—the hammer. Hammering, I was pretty good at.

“I allotted myself thirty minutes for this little, quick and easy job. I guess I’ll never learn. I placed a leg in the hole and whacked it with my hammer. Nothing happened. The plastic leg was too wide for the hole. I smacked it harder. Nothing happened. I tried another leg with the same result. Reasoning, I extracted that each leg would be exactly the same. It only took me three-quarters of the legs to figure that out. I was getting smarter with old age. Then I tried a different shelf with the exact same results. Now I knew why it was so cheap to purchase.

“Then the thought hit me just before I hit my thumb. I saw myself opening the front door and pitching the whole unit down the stairs, running after it then jumping on top of it until it broke to pieces. The visual was a strong as watching a TV show unfold in my mind. There before me was my old nemesis—anger. I was being tempted. ‘Remember how good it feels to break things,’ it whispered. ‘Go ahead. You really liked to scream and swear and break stuff. Remember that exhilaration?’

“Here I was, after years of victory over my anger, the opportunity to explode was right there before me. I stopped. Set everything down and walked to my office where I started back to work on a sermon about, of all things, temptation. I was being tempted. I could walk away and never put the shelf together, which is another form of surrendering, or I could relax and think it through. God provided the door away from temptation and I ran. I finally got the shelf together, at least, in two pieces. Instead of a five shelf unit, I now have two separate shelves of three and two. God gave me the way out and I took it. It isn’t perfect but the more I look at it, the more I see God’s provision. Thanks, Lord.”

We have spent several weeks working on building our spiritual lives up. It is just about that time when the temptation to go back to who we were grows stronger. To continue to grow, we need to stay close to the vine and flee from the temptations that held us back for so long.

Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Imagining the Gospels: Cycle B Sermons for Lent & Easter Based on the Gospel Texts, by Timothy W. Ayers