Matthew 4:1-11 · The Temptation of Jesus
Jesus' Forty Days, and Ours
Matthew 4:1-11
Sermon
by James McCormick
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Matthew, Mark, and Luke all begin their stories of the adult Jesus at the Jordan River, where he is baptized by his cousin John. In baptism, Jesus identifies with us, and with all people everywhere. And, there, at the baptism, God said, “This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased.” At the beginning of the story, the gospel writer wants to make it clear who this is he is telling about: this is Jesus, the son of God! What a powerful beginning to the story!

Jesus knew, as he must have known for some time, that God was calling him to a special mission. Now was the time to begin it. So, he went into the wilderness to sort it all out, to clarify the nature of God’s call. He stayed in that wilderness, fasting and praying for 40 days (that’s where we get the 40 days of Lent.) And, his time in the wilderness was much like the 40 years Israel spent in the wilderness on their way to the promised land. During that time, both Israel and Jesus were tempted, or, put to the test. And, they emerged from the test even stronger in faith, not in spite of the testing, but in large measure because of it.

Jesus went into the wilderness because he wanted to leave the world of many voices. He wanted to hear the One voice, the voice of God. What he discovered was that even in that remote wilderness there was more than one presence, and there was more than one voice. There always is. It was up to Jesus and it is up to us to sort out the many voices we hear. To focus on the One voice that is the source of truth, the source of strength, the source of life. The ultimate question is: in the presence of many voices calling to us, enticing us, and tempting us, to what voice will we listen?

Jesus was there without any human companions, so he must have told this story to the disciples later. He must have considered it to be a watershed moment in his life. If God was calling him to be the Messiah, the question was, what kind of Messiah was he to be? The people wanted a Messiah like David, the greatest of the Hebrew kings. They wanted a Messiah who would recruit an army, defeat the Romans, and bring back the good old days of peace, pride, and prosperity. Would Jesus listen to the voice of the people and attempt to do all those things? It occurs to me that sometimes the voice of the majority is the same as the voice of the devil.

I’m convinced that at least part of the temptation, the testing, was to listen to the voice of the people and to become that kind of Messiah. It would have been far easier and more popular for Jesus simply to go along, and to become an earthly king. But, that’s not the choice he made. Listening to the voice of God, he rejected the urging of the people and embraced an image given by Isaiah in the Exile. Jesus sensed that God was calling him to be a suffering servant, one who would win people not by force, but by the redemptive power of a love that loves enough to suffer. Jesus was called to the way of the cross.

I think that became clear to Jesus there in the wilderness, and the time of testing was a part of that clarifying process. It will be a great thing if something like that can happen to us during our 40 days of Lent. It will be a great thing if we can become clear about who we are as children of God, clear about what God is calling us to do, and clear about our commitment to do it!

Let’s look for a few moments at the setting for Jesus’ temptation/testing experience. Tradition tells us that, after Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan River, he went west, toward Jerusalem, into the Wadi Qelt. That’s a real wilderness. There would not have been anyone else around for miles. And the devil used the setting as a source of temptation. I have stood there in that wilderness and tried to imagine what Jesus must have seen and experienced. Under foot, there are stones worn smooth by thousands of years of running water, stones that look very much like loaves of bread. To the left and to the right, there are the rugged crags of high mountains that must have reminded Jesus of the pinnacle of the Temple. And, looking back, toward the river, there was the splendor of one of Herod’s magnificent palaces, reminding him of the great kingdoms of the world.

It’s fascinating to me that the same setting, the same event can be used either for inspiration or for temptation, depending upon who is doing the interpretation. Jesus would often use natural settings as sources of inspiration. He would see a farmer planting seed, and he would begin a parable, “Behold a sower went forth to sow…” He would see a shepherd tending his flock, and Jesus would say, “I am the good shepherd, I know my sheep, and my sheep know my voice.” Jesus would call attention to a vineyard and say, “I am the vine, you are the branches,” using the setting as a source of inspiration.

But here, the devil points to things around them and uses them to tempt, to defile. Remember, Jesus had just come from one of the high moments of his life. There, at his baptism, he had heard God say, “This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased.” A great moment of inspiration! But as soon as he got into the wilderness, the devil took that time of inspiration and turned it around, planting seeds of doubt. He began the temptation by saying, “If…if…if you are the son of God, do this, do that - if! If you are the son of God, then prove it!” And, if he was the son of God, and if he was to be the kind of Messiah the people wanted, the things he was tempted to do seemed reasonable, even desirable!

If Jesus did the three things he was tempted to do, those things would hold great promise for an earthly kingdom: bread for him, and for the world, political control of all nations, a spectacular feat to gain the attention and the affection of the masses. Why not? Why not? If that is what you want to accomplish.

Here in the first days of Jesus’ ministry, he shows us something important: temptation is real. And it comes to all of us. It came to Jesus, and it comes to us, every one of us. And, this time in the wilderness was not the last of Jesus’ struggles with it. You remember that Peter tempted him to reject the way of the cross, and Jesus said to him, “Get behind me, Satan!” And, that struggle in the Garden of Gethsemane - the struggle so intense that sweat appeared on his brow like great drops of blood - Jesus was tempted again to reject the cross and to say “No” to what God was calling him to do. No, Jesus had recurring temptations, and we will too, as long as we live.

I’ve never been able to believe in a red devil, with horns, and a tail, and a pitchfork. That stereotype is too easily dismissed. I don’t care whether you call him or it the devil, Satan, Lucifer, Beelzebub, the deceiver, the tempter. I don’t care whether you personalize it or depersonalize it. But, whoever or whatever it is, we have to deal with it. We know it all too well, don’t we? There is something at work in the world and in us that tempts us to be less than we know we ought to be. There is something that tempts us to move away from God toward the dark side. Paul knew about it. That’s why he said that we have a battle on our hands. We’d better put on the whole armor of God, so that we can stand against the wiles of the devil. Luther knew about it. That’s why he wrote in his hymn, “His craft and power are great, and armed with cruel hate, on earth is not his equal”.. However you picture it, you had better take it seriously, as Jesus did.

I don’t know about you, but in my wrestling with the devil, I have learned how clever he is. He knows where my weak places are. He knows what buttons to push. He knows how to place those devilish rationalizations in my mind. You’ve heard the whispers in the ear, I know. “No one will know - just this once won’t hurt - you’re entitled - besides, everyone is doing it.” Have you heard those whispers? And, the most diabolical one of all: “Generally speaking, this doesn’t work out very well, but it won’t happen to you, the negative consequences won’t happen to you. You’re the exception!” He knows our weaknesses, doesn’t he?

But not only does he tempt us at our weak places, he can even use our strengths to weaken us. I heard a pastor confess it. He was a superb preacher, took it seriously, and worked at it. One night he was working on the sermon for the following Sunday. He little son came in and asked his daddy to come tuck him in. The father told him to get into bed and he would come in a few minutes to give him a goodnight kiss and tuck him in. But then, he became engrossed in his preparation, and much later, he remembered the promise. He went into his son’s bed room only to discover that the little fellow was already asleep. That story breaks my heart, because it has a familiar ring to it. His passion to be a good preacher - a good thing - had tempted him that night to be a bad father. Do you hear it? The tempter even turns our strengths against us if we are not careful.

Well, if temptation is real and if we will be wrestling with it all our lives, how best to deal with it? Let’s look at how Jesus did it. There, in the wilderness, every time he was tempted, he quoted scripture. And, don’t miss the fact that all of the scriptures he quoted were from the Exodus. When facing his own struggles in the wilderness, he looked back and remembered Israel’s struggles in their wilderness.

That should give us a clue as to what scripture is. To quote scripture is not like rubbing Aladdin’s lamp to produce a miracle. It’s not like holding a cross out in front of a threatening vampire. No, it works like this, I think. Listen now, because I’m about to say something important. To quote scripture is to remember. It is to recall how God has been faithful and dependable in times past. It is to recall how God’s grace and strength has always been sufficient for our every need. And, as we remember, God Himself comes to us and gives us what we need to resist temptation. God comes and gives us what we need to cope. And God uses that experience to make us stronger and more faithful followers of Jesus. Scripture is not just the record of what God said and did long ago. It is the means by which we open ourselves to Him so that He can do it again right here, right now!

That’s what happened to me. When I was diagnosed with prostate cancer, at the instant the doctor pronounced the “C” word, there popped into my mind some verses of scripture that I had not thought about for over fifty years. I know my mother had placed them there because they were from the King James translation. Here are the words: “Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee.” (Isaiah 26:3) Instantly I thought of those words, after not hearing them for over fifty years. They had simply been filed away there for the time when I would need them. In the weeks following, whenever I thought about cancer, I would think of those words. They were the last words in my mind when I went under the anesthesia. They were the first words in my mind when I awoke. And, throughout the whole process, God freed me from anxiety and fear.

Do you understand? I wasn’t just remembering some words. I was remembering that God’s grace is always sufficient - always has been, always will be. And, as I remembered, God Himself was there, and He kept His promise, “Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee.”

There in the wilderness, Jesus was tempted by the devil. The devil called to him, pleaded with him, made promises to him, told him lies. It was tempting. What did Jesus do with it? He quoted scripture and changed the channel. You see, that’s the choice always open to us. We can either continue to listen to the persuasions of the devil, and as we listen, we give them more power. Or, we can change the channel and tune in to God. That’s what Jesus did when he quoted scripture. He tuned the devil out, and tuned God in.

I’ve said it before: the mind cannot focus on more than one thing at a time. We have a choice as to our focus. When we are focusing on God, we cannot at the same time be listening to the tempter. When the devil comes with his persuasive arguments, we can just do as Jesus did, take the remote, click on God, and change the channel.

Let me give some examples. When someone has hurt us, and we are tempted to become angry, we allow that experience to damage the relationship. If we continue to rehearse the hurt, we give it more power, and the situation becomes worse. But, if we change our focus to God, allow Him to come and remind us of the number of times He has forgiven us, perhaps our hard heart will begin to melt and we receive the power to love and forgive, and healing begins.

When we are tempted to compromise with our own values and thus become less than our best, the more we focus on the situation, the more the tempter shows us how to rationalize and gives us “good reasons” for doing the thing we know we should not do. But, if we focus on God, God comes and reminds us that we were made for something better than that. We are a child of God and the very best in life comes to us when we act like it.

When we have been diagnosed with an illness, the more we concentrate on the illness, the more power we give it, and the tempter uses that to weaken our resistance. But, if we will focus on God, God comes and gives us strength and courage to resist, and frees all of the body’s recuperative powers to fight back.

You get the point. We need not be in this struggle alone. When we are tempted to be less than our best, when we are tempted to despair, to give in, or to give up, turn to the scriptures. Remember who God is and what He has done, remember that God’s grace and strength have been sufficient in the past, remember all of that and then God will come and do it again, right here, right now.

Where did Jesus go from his wilderness experience? Instead of being weakened by it, he was strengthened by it. He immediately left the wilderness, called his disciples, and got at the task to which God had called him. He was very clear now about who he was and what he was to do. He was God’s son, and he was to be about his Father’s business.

I love the way Matthew closes the wilderness story. After Jesus had changed channels, after Jesus had turned his back on Satan and turned toward God, the Bible says that angels came and ministered to him. Isn’t that beautiful? Angels came and ministered to him. Do you suppose Jesus was remembering that when he said, “Seek first the Kingdom of God - the centrality of God - put that first, and then everything else that you need will be yours as well.”

Angels came and ministered to him. That is a beautiful way of saying that God was there, God was real, and God’s grace and strength were sufficient.

I remember a poem that says it. Listen:

“At the heart of the cyclone, tearing the sky,
and flinging the clouds and the towers by
is a place of central calm.
So, here in the roar of mortal things,
I have a place where my spirit sings…
in the hollow of God’s palm.”
You place yourself there, and you will be equal to all the demands of life.

Prayer: We know now where to turn, our Father, when we are tempted by voices other than Yours. We remember who we are, whose we are, and we remember all that You have done in the past by Your grace and strength. Then we place our lives in your loving hands, knowing that there, we are secure. Give us the grace to do just that, as Jesus did, in whose name we pray. Amen.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Selected Sermons, by James McCormick