Luke 4:1-13 · The Temptation of Jesus
Keep The Devil Out!
Luke 4:1-13
Sermon
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Because of the book and movie, The Exorcist, there is probably more talk about the Devil than ever. The movie earned even more than The Godfather - $180 million. For blocks, people lined up waiting to enter the theaters. One theater operator reported that, at each showing, there were four blackouts, six vomiting spells, and many spontaneous leavings during the show. Today, we are pre-occupied with the Devil. In New Jersey, a twenty year old lad persuaded his two best friends to drown him because he believed that upon death he would be reborn as a leader of forty legions of devils. In San Francisco, there are 10,000 dues-paying members of a church of Satan.

In The Exorcist, we see how terrible it is to be possessed by the Devil and how hard it is to get the Devil out of a person. It is a story of how a twelve year old girl was possessed by the Devil, how unsuccessful every attempt was to cure her, and how two priests were brought in for the exorcism by the power of Jesus' name. So horrible is it to be possessed of the Devil that the movie was considered a horror movie leaving viewers with psychological trauma. Our real concern today should not be how to get the Devil out of you, but how to keep the Devil out. Even if you get the Devil out of you, you may not be permanently free of the Devil. Recently, someone asked me what would happen if you did not pay your Exorcist. I did not know. He told me, "You will be repossessed!" In today's Gospel, it was not a problem for Jesus to get the Devil out of himself, but rather to keep Satan from entering him. We see Jesus confronted by the Devil and how Jesus would not allow the Devil to come into his life and thinking. Today we need to study the methods of Jesus that we, too, can keep the Devil out!

No Room for the Devil

The first thing that keeps the Devil out of you is the possession of the Holy Spirit. This was the case with Jesus. Our text says, "Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan, and was led by the Spirit ..." Jesus had just been baptized when the Spirit came upon him like a dove. This Spirit led him to the wilderness to decide how he was to carry out his mission as Messiah. During this time, the Devil came to tempt him to do the wrong thing. But the Devil did not get into his thinking because there was no room for the Devil to exist. Jesus was full of the Spirit.

This reminds us that each of us is possessed by some spirit. It can be the Spirit of God or the spirit of Satan. Just as the Holy Spirit can come into our lives, so the spirit of the Devil can possess us. The question is, which spirit is in us? This assumes that the Devil is real and there is truth in the fact that the evil spirit of the Devil can possess you. It must be admitted that some people do not believe in the existence of the Devil. A young woman, one night before going to bed, came to her mother and said that she could not marry her fiance. The mother asked why. She said, "I found out tonight that Jimmy does not believe in the Devil." The mother replied, "That's all right, honey. You just go ahead and marry him. We'll prove it to him!" It is strange that we do not believe in the Devil. Throughout the Bible, the Devil is referred to as a reality. Jesus believed in the Devil. Luther believed in him enough to throw an ink bottle at him when he was in the Wartburg Castle. Two of the four stanzas of "A Mighty Fortress," Luther's great hymn, deal with the Devil: "For still our ancient foe ... on earth is not his equal ... And though this world with devils filled ... one little word shall fell him."

When you are filled with the Holy Spirit, as Jesus was, there is no room for the Devil to enter your life. It is like a cup that is full to the brim; you can't get another drop in it. A true Christian can say, "My cup runneth over" with the Spirit. Not only is there no room for the evil spirit to enter, but the Holy Spirit will drive out any evil in the heart. In a Greek legend, there were Sirens who sang so seductively that sailors forgot their work and their ship crashed on the rocks. One traveler, Orpheus, avoided the threat because he was the sweetest musician. He answered the seductive singing of the Sirens by singing so beautifully as the ship approached the rocks that the sailors did not even hear the Sirens.

How does one get the Holy Spirit to the point of being filled up? The Spirit always comes with the Word of God. The Hebrew word for the Spirit is "Breath." Spirit and Word are two sides of a coin; they are inseparable. This is seen by the fact that you cannot say a word without some breath. The Spirit of God comes in and through the Word and the Sacraments. In the days of gas shortages, people lined up outside gas stations and hoped to get their tanks filled. The church is also a spiritual filling station where people come to get filled with the Spirit who comes to us as we read, study, listen to, and digest the Word of God. This reminds us how absolutely important and indispensable worship is to a Spirit-filled Christian.

Comprehensive Protection

The next way to keep the Devil out of your life is to keep spiritually strong. You see, the Devil approaches us and enters us at our weak point. In our text, we learn that Jesus fasted for forty days. At the end of this period, as you might expect, he was extremely hungry. The text reads, "He ate nothing in those days; and when they were ended, he was hungry." The Devil said to him, "If you are the son of God, command this stone to become bread." The weak point at this time was Jesus' great desire for food. It was surely a serious temptation - who could avoid it? - to use God's power to turn a stone into a loaf of bread.

The Devil approaches us at our weak point. Of course, we do the same to others, don't we? A very successful pitcher was once asked the secret of his success in striking out batters. He explained, "I pitch to the batter's weakness." He went on to elaborate that every batter has some kind of ball that he misses, whether it is a fast ball, curve, slider, knuckler, or a sinker. This is his weakness: the ball he cannot hit. Don't you wonder what type of ball is Hank Aaron's weakness? Delilah, in the story of Samson, used the same strategy in learning the weakness of Samson. At first he said it was new bow-strings, then new ropes, then weaving his seven locks in a loom. Each time he was able to get free when the Philistines came to capture him. Through nagging, Delilah learned his real weakness: cutting his hair. That was his undoing!

What is your weak point that may be your undoing, too? Where are you vulnerable? Do you have an Achilles' heel? The weak point in Eve, where the Devil got in, was her pride. She wanted to be like God, knowing good and evil. Esau's point of vulnerability was his stomach and love for food. He sold his birthright to Jacob for a pot of good food. Imagine selling your place in life for a dish of food! David, the great king and mighty warrior, fell at the point of his weakness: sex. He looked down upon another man's wife as she was taking a bath. This, as you know, resulted in adultery, murder, and death of the child. Judas Iscariot had his weak point: he sold Jesus for a measly thirty pieces of silver, the price of a slave.

In Ephesians, Paul writes that we should put on the whole armor of God. To have armor covering you except for some small part of the body welcomes the Devil's attack. It is like a wise man's taking full coverage in insurance for all of his property: not only fire, but also theft and comprehensive coverage. That is what we need to keep the Devil out: comprehensive coverage, to cover the whole body, mind, and soul that the Devil will have no place to enter us. The big question you and I must ask: What part of me is not covered with the protection of God, what area of my life have I not given to God for his protection?

Being Sure

Jesus kept the Devil from entering him by holding fast to his faith. He had deep convictions of the truth of God. The Devil uses the method of asking questions to arouse doubts. When we seriously doubt the truth, he has a chance to take over our lives. In our text, three times the Devil tries to raise doubts in Jesus' mind. Repeatedly the Devil said, "If you are the son of God ..." Why did he not say, "Since you are the son of God" or "because you are the son of God"? Jesus had just been told at his baptism by a voice from heaven, "You are my beloved son ..." Jesus knew he was God's Son. Why, then, did the Devil raise the question? He was out to cause Jesus to doubt that he was the Son of God. If he could get Jesus to doubt this, he could do anything with Jesus. Satan used the same method on Eve in the Garden of Eden: "Did God say?" Now Eve knew that God said they should not eat the fruit of a certain tree. Again, do you see the method Satan uses, the suggestion of doubt of the very truth of God?

Satan uses the same technique upon us Christians. This is how he hopes to get inside us and take over our lives as master. The common expression today is, "I am not so sure anymore ..." You can say, "I once believed that all the Ten Commandments were to be obeyed regardless of the situation. But now in the light of Situation Ethics, I am not so sure. Maybe there is some truth in relative ethics." Again, "I am not so sure that it is necessary to go to church regularly. Why can't you worship God just as well at the beach or on the mountains? There was a time when I thought you ought to go to church, but now I am not so sure." Or you might say, "I used to think that there was only one God and only one way to God throught Christ. But now, in the age of Pluralism, there are other gods and many ways to God. Maybe the Christian way is only one way. I am not too sure that you must have the Christian God to be saved." Do you recognize the Devil working when you say, "I am not so sure anymore!"?

To keep the Devil out, we must have deep and strong convictions of the truth. One reason the Devil is making so much headway in our society is that we have become soft and indifferent toward the truths of God. This is shockingly the case with seminary students; a recent poii indicated that fifty-three percent of them no longer hold to such traditional beliefs as the Virgin Birth, the physical resurrection, and the return of Christ to earth. This is not an exception but, sorry to say, the condition of many ministers. In a recent study of 1,580 Protestant pastors in California, it was revealed that thirty-one percent do not believe faith in Jesus is necessary for salvation, thirty-three percent do not believe in God, thirty-nine percent do not accept the diety of Jesus, and eighty-three percent reject the second coming of Christ. In the light of these facts, do you wonder why the Devil is well and having a bonanza in our world?

If you want to keep the Devil out of you, you need to strengthen your convictions about the eternal truths. You need to say, "I believe this with my whole heart." You and I need the certainty that Luther had when he finished his explanations of the three articles of the Apostles' Creed with the words, "This is most certainly true." There should be no question in our minds about God, Christ, or what God has said. We need to be so sure of these things that we would risk our very lives for them and on them. When you are positive of these truths, the Devil has not a chance to enter your thinking or living. Maybe we ought to pray daily, "Lord, I believe; help my unbelief."

"It is Written"

To keep the Devil out of you, you need to know the truth just as Jesus did. When Satan tempted him to make bread out of stones, to cast himself down from the pinnacle of the temple, and when he offered him the kingdoms of the world, Jesus turned Satan away by giving him the truth directly from the Bible. Three times Jesus quoted the book of Deuteronomy. Satan cannot face the truth of God.

The truth of God is recorded for us in the Bible. If we are going to know the truth of God, we must know the Bible as Jesus did. To begin, we must know what the Bible is. It is not just another human book, even though men were used in bringing it into being. The Bible is a divine book in which God reveals himself. It is the Word of God, directly from the mouth of God. This does not mean that you must be a fundamentalist or a literalist. To say that the Bible is the Word of God is to say that the Word is found in the words of the Bible, and this Word is concretely the incarnate Word, Jesus Christ. The point we need to see is that, in the Bible, God lives and speaks. His Word is one of power and authority. You can believe it as gospel truth. It is the truth that turns away the Devil.

After we accept the Bible as the true Word of God, then we need to know it frontwards and backwards. We ought to know it so well that we can quote it when necessary, just as Jesus did. The sad part about it, however, is that while we buy the Bible - ten million copies in 1975 - we do not know it. In a recent poll, fifty percent could not name the first four books of the New Testament. We do not know the difference between epistles and apostles. We think that Sodom and Gomorrah are husband and wife. Suppose you were asked to find the Ten Commandments, or the Lord's Prayer, or the Golden Rule. Would you be able to turn at once to them in the Bible? Probably one out of a million of us could do it! If we go to look for something in the Bible, someone might jokingly suggest we find it in "Hezekiah." Then we would go looking for it in either the Old or New Testament not knowing that Hezekiah was an Old Testament king!

The time has come for the church to return to a serious study of the Bible. For some years now, we have substituted bull sessions on social issues instead of opening up the Bible to see what it has to say about life today. Instead of telling Bible stories to little children, we have told them nursery fables. In place of memorizing golden texts from the Bible, we have given the little ones the job of cutting out dolls during the church school hour. As a result, we have a harvest of biblical ignorance that is appalling. No wonder the Devil has no problem getting into us! The time has come for us to become daily Bible readers. We would do well to get into a Bible study course. The Bible should be the textbook of our lives, a book that we know so well that we can quote it at any time. To be saturated with the Bible and its truth is a good way to keep the Devil out of your life. Paul urges us to take the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God that we might ward off the Devil who seeks to devour us.

So, the question for us is not how to get the devil out of us, but how to keep him out of us. If once possessed of Satan, it is a horrible thing to get him exorcised. The smart thing to do would be not to let him get in us. A man once came to Dwight L. Moody and said, "Mr. Moody, if you were in the mess I am in, what would you do?" He replied, "I would not have gotten into the mess in the first place." That is good advice for us, too. Don't get into the mess of having the Devil in you. Keep the Devil out of you and you will never face the more difficult problem of getting the Devil out of you. Begin today a program of preventive exorcism.

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