Luke 4:1-13 · The Temptation of Jesus
Our Christian I.D.
Luke 4:1-13
Sermon
by John M. Braaten
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Given that you and I are reasonably good people, it probably does not amaze you to read that Jesus was able to overcome temptation. After all, like me, you've probably been able to do it yourself, many times. Admittedly, we have also caved in to temptation innumerable times, but for a person with Jesus' devotion and strength, eluding the tempter's entrapment must have been a piece of cake.

That assumption is based on that belief that temptation is merely the urge to do something wrong. It is the desire to do something which will benefit one's self but which, if done, would violate the laws of God or society.

For instance, you walk through a store and you see something you would like to own, but you don't have the cash, so into your mind pops the thought of stealing it. Or, you have been given the responsibility of collecting money for a project and since no one really knows what you have gathered, and you are a little short of cash, you think about embezzling some of it. Or you are in a tight situation and the easiest way to weasel out of it, you think, would be to lie. We come across events like these in our lives and we call them temptations." I guess they are that, but they really don't convey the depth of what the Bible has in mind when it speaks of temptations.

The temptations of Jesus in our text were not designed so much to get Jesus to do something wrong, as they were attempts to get Jesus to lose sight of who he was, and leave unfulfilled the mission God had given him. So what is involved in Jesus' wilderness experience with Satan is something far deeper than merely disobeying the commandments, and far more dangerous. There was something very frightening in what went on; we need to look at it carefully.

The gospel story this morning follows on the heels of Jesus' baptism. When he was baptized in the Jordan River, you remember, he heard the voice of the Heavenly Father saying, "You are my beloved Son." Now, out in the barren wilderness, on the other side of the Jordan, he hears Satan saying, "If you are the Son of God ..." If you are the Son of God. The devil is suggesting that there is some doubt about who he is. In effect, he asks, "How can you, Jesus of Nazareth, a poor Galilean carpenter, be the long-awaited Messiah? How can you lead without followers? How can you, with only a minimal education, consider becoming a great leader of Israel? Who will ever believe you, Jesus?"

Don't you see how subtle Satan is, not in persuading Jesus to do something wrong, but in getting Jesus to question who he is?

What is at stake here is the matter of identity. Who was Jesus? And our identity; who are we? The most important thing about you is the matter of who you are, your I.D., your identity.

One of the saddest conditions a person can face in life is amnesia, when one doesn't know who they are. It is frightening when one does not understand what life is about, when one can see no purpose in life. That which made Willy Lohman such a pathetic character in Arthur Miller's play, Death of a Salesman, is revealed by his son Biff after Willie committed suicide; he says that at the heart of his father's problems was that he didn't know who he was.

Knowing your identity, who you are and whose you are, is essential to your wholeness as God's child and to your awareness of what God wants you to do with your life. So Satan's primary objective is not getting you to do something wrong, something bad, but to cause you to lose track of who you are - to lose your identity - to lose your sense of belonging to the family of God.

The ways Satan tries to convince us that we do not deserve to be God's beloved are most often subtle, clever and deadly. And these temptations, like the temptations of Christ, are far more insidious than any impulse to disobey the commandments.

Consider this tricky question, "If you are a child of God, then why don't you feel more like one?" It's deadly because sometimes we don't feel much like a beloved member of God's family. The implication is that if you don't feel like one, then maybe you're not one. Maybe you are not a child of God, maybe you are not a Christian.

Or how about this terrible temptation, "If you are a child of God, then why don't you act like one?" I know there are times when I don't act like one. How about you? Why do I have the thoughts I sometimes have? Why do I do the things I sometimes do? And why don't I seem to be getting much better? Me a Christian? I sometimes wonder. How can I be a Christian if I don't live as a Christian should live? Satan is filled with glee when we begin to ask that question of ourselves: Am I a Christian?

Even sneakier is the question: "Are you sure you're a real Christian?" As though there are Christians, and then there are the real Christians. Now we have moved from self-examination to comparing ourselves to one another and if we don't watch it we will find ourselves trying to usurp Christ's role as judge, determining who is saved and who is not.

A woman came into a pastor's office some years ago. She told the pastor she had been attending worship at one of the local churches, but as far as she could see there were only two real Christians in the whole congregation, and the pastor wasn't one of them!

Well, where did we ever get the idea we could rate our Christian identity? Maybe it's because we have a picture in our minds of what a real Christian is, and then we compare others to that "ideal." Or we compare ourselves, and it causes us to doubt and ask, "Am I a real Christian?"

The word "wilderness" in our text was often used by the Jewish people as a symbol for being lost - to be spiritually lost. Sometimes we don't feel like children of God. Sometimes we sure don't act like it. So it seems as though we are in a wilderness, not knowing who we are, not knowing where we are, experiencing the fear of being lost, of being cut adrift in life.

What do we do then? Well, what did Jesus do out in the wilderness of his temptation? He went back to the Scriptures that he learned as a child. He went back to the stories which had been told to him at home and in the synagogue. He remembered the things God had done for him; he recalled the truths God had spoken to him and the people of Israel.

Our Old Testament lesson this morning underlines how the Hebrew people in those days understood who they were. They continually reminded themselves that God had chosen them. They had not elected God; God had sought them out, selected them. It began with Abraham, a wandering Armenian, 2000 years before Christ. God promised that Abraham and his descendants would become a great nation, and that all the rest of the world would be blessed through them. Later God delivered that people out of slavery and brought them to the land he had promised to them. And all along he sent prophets to them with achingly beautiful claims, "Fear not, O Israel, for I have redeemed you, I have called you by name, you are mine (Isaiah 43:1)." But those rebellious people turned from God, so he let their sins catch up with them, and they were exiled from their homeland. When they repented, however, God brought them back again, and they came back with tears streaming down their faces because they knew that God's promises to them had not been broken. Though they had been faithless, God had remained faithful.

What does this history lesson have to do with us? Just about everything. For our identity as children of God rests on the fact that God's claim has been laid upon us. Jesus said, "You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit ... (John 15:16)." Nowhere is it written that our acceptance by Jesus is dependent upon how we feel or upon anything we've done or not done. Our life as Christians doesn't rest upon feelings, or upon how certain we are that we are Christians. None of that counts, for Christ has claimed us. Beginning with baptism he claimed us, which is something he did, not something we did. And Christ has been claiming us as his own and offering to fulfill the promises of Scripture ever since.

The New Testament lesson for this Sunday reminds us that God's message of grace is always near us, as near as our own hearts. It says that God accepts everyone who comes to him. In Paul's words, "Everyone who calls on the Lord for help will be saved." Everyone? Everyone! Everyone is invited to come, with the promise that whoever does come will be received, accepted, forgiven, loved.

Do you believe that? Do you want it? Do you want Jesus as your Lord and Savior? Then you are a Christian! You may not always be a very faithful one. You may not always be a very strong one. You may not always feel like one. You may not always act like one, but you are a child of God because Christ has chosen you, and enabled you to acknowledge his claim on your life. Some of you, if you're anything like me, need to be encouraged every day to step out into the joy and freedom of believing that that's the way it is, so you can stop wondering who you are and what you are, and can press on as God's beloved children in this world.

In some churches when babies are baptized they are given a candle; it is to be lit each year on the anniversary of their baptism. Those candles are given as a visual reminder to them, and to others in the family, that he or she is a child of God. It's a sign of assurance of who we are - or better, whose we are. Maybe there isn't anything more important that we can do for our children than to keep reminding them of who they are, and whose they are. They belong to Jesus. He chose them. And he chose you. And glory of glories, he chose me. Me! Christ claims that you and I are worthy of being one of his dearly beloved - worth dying for, and worth returning for, in order that we might be his ... forever.

When Martin Luther became depressed, he saw it as a temptation of Satan and he would turn to his ancient foe and cry out, "I am baptized. I am baptized." He needed the assurance of his identity, that he belonged to Jesus. If he were going to carry out the great work God had given him to do he needed to be sure that even though his faith might waver, God's all-encompassing love would not. He needed the assurance that he was held, held firmly in that mighty grip of mercy.

Out there in the wilderness Jesus was tempted and tested as Satan tried to get him to compromise his high calling. "Turn the stones into bread!" Not just for himself, but for the world. Jesus knew how poor they were, how hungry they were. But we humans cannot live by bread alone. Providing bread for the starving was important, but that is not why he had come; he would not substitute the good for the best.

Or how about the temptation to fall down and worship Satan? Why not? Satan implies, "Think of yourself Jesus. Why suffer the rejection of people? Show them that you have the right stuff to be the Messiah. Show them that you are a winner; they will get on the bandwagon and follow you up to the very jaws of hell. Why go through the agony of betrayal, denial and desertion by your closest friends? Why endure the suffering of the cross? Think Jesus, you have to look out for yourself. You deserve to be happy; you ought to enjoy life and it will cost you so little, just bow down before me. Everyone will understand, even the Father; it just makes good sense. Don't be so hard on yourself."

But Jesus had come with a mission that was far more important than merely trying to get the most out of life, and far greater than helping others to become successful. He had come to illustrate God's love in a unique and sacrificial way. He had come to give his all, to usher in a whole new age of mercy, forgiveness and eternal life. He would not substitute the good for the best. He would not exchange the high for the highest.

So in the midst of the temptations which seek to lure us into forgetting who we are and what we are to be about in this world, comes the insistent invitation from God to the highest and best of all callings. A Christian calling which says that we are to live out the gospel in our everyday lives. We are to be visible expressions of the loving, caring God who has come to us in Jesus Christ. Every day we are tempted to abandon our calling, to sink into what is ultimately a deadly way of life, living merely as consumers in God's world, taking the easy way out, living primarily for ourselves. Living for, what one man called, the big seven: Money, fame, success, power, health, security, and pleasure.

It is doubtful that the everyday sins which plague us and supply tinder for the fires of our guilt will cause us to lose out on salvation, especially if we come to God daily in repentance and rely on our Savior's forgiveness. Nor are the big trials of life, the great crises, our greatest danger, because chances are, they will draw us back to the Heavenly Father for the security of his power and grace. Not even our doubts and rebellion offer the greatest peril, for we usually discover, as a friend read in devotions recently, "... that God knows all about it and follows us into our darkness; and there, where we thought finally to escape him, we run straight into his arms." No, our greatest threat is a way of life which day in and day out, crowds out faith, elbows God out, takes over in subtle ways, forming and shaping us in such a way that we forget who we are and what God has called us to do in this world.

So what are we to do? Well, out there in the wilderness our Lord nothing to rely on except the old, familiar, words of Scripture, "One does not live by bread alone." "Do not put the Lord your God to the test." "Worship the Lord your God and serve him only!" There's a good chance that Jesus didn't feel much like the Son of God out there in the wastelands, because he was tired, hungry and exhausted. But he had the Scriptures. He knew that God was within him, and he gave himself to obeying what he knew and believed about God.

The same is true for us. Often in the midst of temptation, the only thing which enables us to do battle with Satan is our faith in Christ and his clear promises. But there is tremendous power in that. Someone has said, "Sometimes indeed, God seems to take everything from us ... but never himself." Never himself!

Our Lord's question is simply this: "Am I not enough for you, 0 you of little faith?" He will never take himself from you. I cannot imagine anything more strengthening, more encouraging as you face the temptations and testings of this life. God will be present for you now and forever.

I invite you to cling to Jesus and say your prayers. Say them with others, and say them alone, asking:

O Lord God, where I have drifted into a compromise with the world, loving its gods, admiring its ways, wanting its rewards, take us into the solitude of some wilderness of your making, and there let us speak our "yes" to you for the glory of your name and for the salvation of our souls. For Jesus' sake. Amen.

C.S.S Publishing Co., THE GREATEST WONDER OF ALL, by John M. Braaten