Luke 4:1-13 · The Temptation of Jesus
Feasting and Fasting for Lent (Part I)
Luke 4:1-13
Sermon
by Eric Ritz
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Many of you sitting in the congregation today often ask me where do I find the material and ideas for sermons. I must confess that 75% of the time the ideas find me. The ideas come from a variety of sources. I recently shared how a splendid quote from St. Frances de Sales helped create the sermon "The Measure of Love." I get ideas from the conversations I share with you at weddings, anniversary parties, hospital rooms, nursing homes. I get them from the many books I read. I get them from scripture verses, from colleagues far more gifted than myself. I get them from movies, Broadway plays, and from special days and themes on the liturgical calendar like today. All I need is a thought, an idea or theme around which to organize the abundance of material and experience that life grants to a preacher of the Word. Frederick Beuchner helped me a few years ago when he told a seminar gathering: "Listen to those moments when tears are in your eyes. Listen to your body as it speaks." Do your homework but don''t forget those precious moments in life when truth and insights are shared with us.

Today''s sermon and theme found me when I reviewed my file on "Lent" and found this written piece telling us how we could observe a "Holy Lent" by feasting and fasting. I am not the source of this quote, and as of this writing I do not know the source of it. However, it is a marvelous writing with great insight and instruction for us today.

We do not think of the imagery of feasting in Lent as we do that of fasting. Feasting in this sense means filling our life to the brim with a life direction, quality, value or purpose for life. Fasting means denying something to us that either we cherish or are presently possessed by.

Dr. Clarence J. Fosberg, a United Methodist minister now retired, shares this penetrating story. A man came to this country from Sweden to find work. But after only a few months, he became very homesick for his native land. Quietly, he saved every penny he could until he had enough for the cheapest ticket on an ocean-going ship to return to Sweden.

On the day of the sailing, the man purchased a supply of cheese and crackers to eat during the five day crossing. He boarded the ship and found his tiny room. Each evening he would watch the elegantly dressed travelers coming and going from the great dining rooms on the ship. And he would retire to his room for cheese and crackers.

Finally, on the last night of the trip, he decided he had enough money for one splurge. He entered the dining room and enjoyed a veritable feast--possibly the best he had ever eaten. When the meal was over, he walked up to the dining room host to pay for the meal. To his surprise, the man said, "Oh, you don''t owe me anything. All of the meals are included in the cost of your ticket."

The story would be funny if it were not so sad. What a tragedy to go through life on cheese and crackers when you could be feasting at the banquet.

Today is the first Sunday of Lent. Lent is a period of forty days before Easter, not counting Sundays, in which we prepare our spiritual lives for the sobering day of Good Friday on which Jesus Christ died as our substitute on the cross for our sins. Also, we prepare for Easter on which we celebrate our new birth as sons and daughters of the Most High and declare anew God''s victory over the powers of sin, death, and evil.

The whole purpose of fasting from something is to discipline our lives in such a way that Jesus Christ can be a deeper reality in our spiritual journey.

Now, you don''t give up something which doesn''t mean much to you. If you do give something up, it should create a void, something else should fill it. It is no good to give something up unless you replace it with something else better. This is where the concept of feasting comes in--to fill our lives with something great and grand after we have gotten rid of something that crippled us with unnecessary burdens.

I want to share three suggestions for your consideration. You can add more or select just one when you alone know where God is trying to mold and shape you into a person of faith and love.

FIRST, FAST A KNOWN SIN AND FEAST ON OBEDIENCE TO GOD''S WILL. Try it--you might like the results.

Dr. Moody used this story as an analogy of the way in which many people are thwarted in their striving for heaven because they are tied to this world. "Cut the cord!" he would admonish. "Set yourself free from the clogging weight of earthly things, and you will be headed toward heaven." Perhaps that is Christ''s words to some of us this morning.

Two battleships assigned to the training squadron had been at sea on maneuvers in heavy weather for several days. The visibility was poor with patchy fog, so the captains remained on the bridge keeping an eye on all activities.

"Is it steady or moving astern?" the captain called out.

The lookout replied, "Steady, captain," which meant they were on a dangerous collision course with that ship.

The captain then called to the signalman, "Signal that ship; 'We are on a collision course, advise you change course twenty degrees.''"

Back came a signal, "Advisable for you to change course twenty degrees."

The captain said, "Send, 'I''m a captain, change course twenty degrees.''"

"I''m a seaman second-class," came the reply. "You had better change your course twenty degrees."

By that time, the captain was furious. He spat out, "Send, 'I''m a battleship. Change course twenty degrees.''"

Back came the flashing light, "I''m a lighthouse. Change your course twenty degrees!"

There are times when we simply need to change direction and set a new course in our lives. Fast a known sin, and feast on obedience to God''s word and direction to some area of your life.

FAST FROM WORDS THAT POLLUTE, FEAST ON WORDS THAT PURIFY.

The ability to bring out the best in each other by the power of encouraging words is truly one of the best pieces of evidence that the Holy Spirit is empowering your witness. Encouragement is like peanut butter on a sandwich--the more you spread it on the bread, the better the bread sticks together. A wise old shepherd in Scotland once described the difference between a good sheep dog and a lousy sheep dog. It seems the difference was that the bad sheep dog ran around a lot and did nothing but bark at the sheep, making them jumpy and nervous. The bad sheep dog forgot to follow the directions of the shepherd and to watch the shepherd for which part of the herd to get in shape. The good sheep dog rarely barked and when he did he found the lead sheep with the bell around its neck and gently led them where the shepherd wanted them to go.

Joyce Landorf, in her marvelous book BALCONY PEOPLE, describes and divides people into two categories, "Basement people and Balcony people." You have probably already figured out that basement people only criticize and poison the landscape of the human soul and spirit. They tell us what we are not--not what we can be.

But, hear how Joyce Landorf Joyce describes the Balcony People:

"Think of it! All around that sphere of clear air in our conscious minds runs a balcony filled with people who are not merely sitting there, but are practically hanging over the rail, cheering us on. My mother, already in heaven''s balcony since 1966, she is there. She always told me that I was special, and that God would give me a unique ministry. Today, I can almost see her lean-ing over the balcony rail, smiling down and saying to me, 'Joyce, I told you so!'' Ah, that great cloud of witnesses in our balcony, past and present. What and where would we be without them?"

This Lenten Season, fast on the words that pollute and feast on words that purify. Become a balcony person.

FAST ON SELF-CONCERN, FEAST ON COMPASSION.

One of the most fascinating stories of faith and conversion that I personally know of in the United States of America is a man by the name of Millard Fuller.

As most of you probably know, the 1970s and 1980s have now been labeled as the "Me Generation" and the "Greed Generation". It seemed that Millard Fuller fit right into those categories. He was a modern day version of the rich, young ruler and Zaccheus rolled into one. Millard began making money in great abundance. By the time he was almost 30 years of age, Millard was a self-made millionaire. He had an impressive listing of what he owned--until his wife began to share some insight that perhaps they owned and possessed him. One day his dear wife, Linda, left him, taking their two children. She said, "I feel as if I don''t have a husband. You are always working and making money. What are you trying to prove?" This jolted him because he dearly loved his wife and children. He pleaded for his wife to please give him another chance. He would change his goal from being an ambitious, self-centered, driven millionaire and become a man of faith and mission for God. He remembered hearing about a special man named Clarence Jordan who had started a mission project in Georgia called "The Koinonia Farms". Linda and Millard decided as they began the process of rebuilding their marriage to stay there for a month. Then something clicked inside Millard. He received a vision of building suitable, affordable housing to replace the shanties and old shacks of the people in the rural area trapped in the vicious cycle of poverty and despair. You know the program today as "Habitat for Humanity". It is truly one of the finest mission programs I know of anywhere in the world. Millard''s life and re-birth began when he gave away his millions and took up a MISSION of compassion.

Millard Fuller said, "I don''t believe that we are saved by how many houses we put up. I don''t believe we are saved by how many poor people we feed. I know that we are saved by the blood of Jesus and the Grace of God. But what is our response since we are saved? That is what matters. Our response. We believe 'Habitat for Humanity'' is one response of what has been done in Christ for us."

This Lent fast on self-concern and feast on compassion for others.

As we opened the worship service today with Jesus'' temptation experience, we know that he was offered all of the bread, power and kingdoms of the world if he would only fall down and worship the evil one. But because he was obedient to God''s will and God''s word, he did not take the fast track of sin. Because he knew that his mission was to bring the grace, love and compassion of God to others, he focused on that priority rather than self-concern. And to this day his words still grace the world because they purify rather than pollute the human spirit and soul.

Think about it.

Dynamic Preaching, The Ritz Collection, by Eric Ritz