Matthew 4:1-11 · The Temptation of Jesus
Tempted By Good
Matthew 4:1-11
Sermon
by Don M. Aycock
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Have you ever noticed that almost every mountaintop experience in life is followed by a valley experience? You graduate from school with the great expectation of making your mark in the world, but you find out that the world doesn't exactly welcome you with open arms. You get married with the full expectation that your new spouse will relieve your loneliness and solve your problems, but you find out you are still you. Life's high moments are often followed by low times -- depression and bewilderment.

If we knew our Bible a little better, these experiences would not surprise us because this happened to Jesus, too. He had gone to John the Baptist who immersed him in the Jordan River and baptized him into a way of life which was to change the world. The heavens opened and Jesus saw the form of a dove descend upon him and heard the voice of God say, You are my son; I am well pleased in you. What a grand and high moment! But looked what happened next: Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan and was led by the Spirit in the desert where for 40 days he was tempted by the devil. This was a fall from the emotional mountain peaks to the valley of despondency. Jesus left John and the others by the Jordan and went off by himself into the desert to hammer out in his own mind his identity. He sought solitude to find his method of being who the voice at the baptism had proclaimed him to be. How does a man act when he is God's Son?

So Jesus began to fast. Fasting is doing without something normal for the sake of something more important. He did without food because he was seeking something greater than bread. The struggle lasted for 40 days. Now the number 40 in the Bible is not just a digit. It is a symbol that something important was happening. The rains fell on Noah for 40 days. The nation of Israel wandered in the wilderness for 40 years. Elijah stayed on the mountain with God for 40 days. Luke is saying here that something important was happening with Jesus. This was the time he was finding his mission in God's eyes, and deciding on his course of action.

That's when these three temptations came to him. You might think of temptations as a gravitational field. The further you are from it the less hold it has on you, while the closer you are to it, the stronger pull it has. Jesus was in this strong field of gravitational pull. Something important was happening to him. He was in a genuine battle for his spiritual life. We sometimes wonder if his temptations were real. Yes! They were real! This was no sham battle, but a war of wits and wills about the destiny of the one God appointed as Savior. William James, a well-known philosopher and psychologist, once thought about his life and he wrote: "If this life be not a real fight, in which something is eternally gained for the universe by success, it is no better than a game of private theatricals from which we may withdraw at will. But it feels like a real fight."

Yes, life is a fight, and Jesus was in it. He found himself being tempted -- pulled -- by good. That's right -- good. You see, every course offered to him was not bad in itself. The tempter never suggested that he do anything overtly immoral or unscrupulous. The actions suggested were good. But that's the problem. They were good, but for Jesus, not the best. He was tempted by good. And so can we. During this Lenten season let us consider these temptations to see how they affect our lives.

I. Some Temptations Are To Satisfy Natural Needs With Unnatural Choices

At the end of Jesus' fast he was hungry. There's an understatement for you. You will notice that the temptations 34come as simple suggestions. That's what temptations are -- suggestions. No one can make us yield. We have to do that ourselves. And what did the devil suggest? The tempter simply suggested that Jesus make some of those little rocks that looked like loaves of bread into real loaves. What could be the harm in that?

Jesus was in the desert coming to grips with the kind of Messiah he was to be. He was settling in his own mind what he needed to do and how he needed to go about his work. The concept became clearer to him as the days dragged on. He was to be a Messiah who pointed to the deeper hunger in people, a hunger beyond bread and wine, a hunger for God. And that is the point of danger in the first temptation: concentrate on the physical necessities; focus on bread; feed the people; be a welfare reformer. These are good things, important things. You have been asked to contribute money so we could do a little to help hungry people. We care about the poor, and this is right and good. Had he allowed himself to be drawn into it, Jesus could have been a marvelous provider of basic human needs. He could have given bread and drawn great crowds to himself. But Jesus came to win people, not to bribe them.

Missionaries realized long ago that they could go into a poor country and draw hordes of people by giving away rice. But what they got for their effort was rice Christians. When the food ran out, the people disappeared. Missionaries thus go into places without a strong witness for Christ and preach the good news of salvation first.

People can be blinded by the physical aspects of life. I used to work with a fellow named Bob. He was a nice guy, powerful of body, but weak of mind. Every day after work he would stop at a liquor store and buy a case of beer. When he got home he and his wife would sit in the backyard and kill the case. That for him was life -- a cool shade tree and a cool brew. He had no interest whatever in any talk about Christ and eternal life. There are millions of people just like him.

Jesus could have gone into the bread distribution business had he wanted to. It was a necessary job, and it was a 35 temptation. But look at his answer: It is written: Man does not live by bread alone. There is a deeper hunger in people, a hunger that a cool beer under the shade tree won't ultimately satisfy; a hunger that weekends in the Bahamas can't fill; a thirst that new cars and nice houses and great neighbors just will not quench. The issue for Jesus was, "Who will be the ultimate focus in my life -- people or God?" He chose God. And do you know what happened? By choosing God, Jesus was set free to serve people.

This temptation and Jesus' answer is not a wholesale condemnation of things. God is not against the bread or houses or cars. He is against a view of life that ignored the spiritual dimension and act as if God does not exist. "We do not live by bread alone," but by a deep awareness that God permeates all of life and that we never get away from him. Bread is good and necessary, but it molds and sours and must be replaced. Life cannot be built on a crust or counted by the loaf. Jesus resisted temptation, but the battle was far from over.

II. Some Temptations Are To Gratify Good Ends With Bad Means.

The devil failed to get Jesus to give in to the temptation to make stones into bread, or in this case, make bread more important than God. But the powers of darkness are relentless so a second temptation came to Jesus. He saw in his mind's eyes the kingdoms of the world. He saw Rome with its regal splendor, Egypt with its elegant might, Babylon with its beautiful riches. They could so easily belong to Jesus if he would only tip his hat to evil. This temptation was an appeal to Jesus' ambition, and that is what made it seem good. After all, did he not come to win people? Would that task not be easier if he had power and authority?

The devil knew that Jesus' goal was to draw people back to God, so that the tempter tried to get Jesus to take a shortcut 36 to that goal. That was the problem. There is nothing necessarily wrong with power and authority. Someone has to be in control. But where would that authority come from? Could a good goal -- to call people to God -- be accomplished by bad means? Jesus could have had all the power he wanted to accomplish his goals. But what kind of power could demand allegiance? What type of authority could make people follow? If a person with a knife at his throat were to follow God would that count?

Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Jesus could have been the most powerful man on earth had he chosen to be so. But he would have failed in the very thing he wanted, namely, to win the hearts of men and women. He came to win people, not to force them. Jesus would not use people for his own glorification. Don't you hate to be used by people? I don't want to be somebody's project or someone's case. I want to be treated like a person with dignity and worth. I want to be accepted for whom I am. I want to love God because he loves me. What kind of God would he be if he held a dagger to my throat and asked, "Now, don't you want to follow me?"

The devil wanted to give Jesus power -- pure raw power -- and thought he could corrupt him with it. "Force them to follow you," he hissed. And Jesus was drawn by that gravitational pull because he wanted to succeed. But look what he answered: It is written: "Worship the Lord your God and serve him only." Ah, there was power! It was the power of absolute allegiance. This was faith that is trust in God that asks for no proof. Jesus did not ask God to up the ante. He was content to use the right means for the right end, even if it meant bypassing the shortcut to success.

Years after this event, the apostle Paul looked back on Jesus' life and proclaimed something about him that would have surprised the devil. In Philippians 2:9-11 Paul said about Jesus, Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and 37 under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. Jesus did not have to grasp at straws or clutch for power. He had it all along. It was different from what most people would have thought, but he had it.

He was tempted to gratify an ambition, but he resisted. Even so, the devil was not ready to give up. A third temptation came.

III. Some Temptations Are To Exploit A Close Relationship With A Shallow Acquaintance.

This was the most subtle of the temptations. The devil even quotes scripture in this one. If you are the Son of God throw yourself down from here. Then he quotes from Psalm 91: He will command his angels concerning you to guard you carefully; they will lift you up in their hands, so that you will not strike your foot against a stone. This was a temptation for Jesus to exploit his relationship with God. "Make a spectacle of yourself," the devil said. "Create a circus. Gather the crowds and leap off the 150-foot tower to the ground below. If you are truly God's Son, you won't get hurt. God will come rescue you. Go ahead. You'll see. You'll impress everyone and they will follow you."

He was teasing and goading Jesus. "How will they ever know who you are? This is your chance! Go ahead. Show them." But the problem was that his basic argument was all wrong. Yes, Jesus was God's Son, but no spectacular circus act would win the people. He had come to win the people with love, not trick them with stunts. The temptation was to use his status as the unique son of God and force God into action by jumping off the temple. That is like snake handling in church today.

How did Jesus answer? Do not put the Lord your God to the test. There would be no exploitation of his relationship to God. There would be no compromise. Rome allowed for all types of religions to flourish in its kingdom, but it fought Christianity from the beginning. Why? Because the Christians would not compromise. They would not bow to Caesar. Doesn't that say something to us?

Jesus realized that he could not try to force God to protect him because God might have had other ideas. There is more to life than safety and comfort. Now that is hard for us to realize. But Jesus came to give his life, not to protect it. His goal was not the applause of the crowds but the single-minded devotion to the will of his Father. The shadow of the cross fell across Jesus' path from his earliest days. The cross was the symbol of shame, rejection, hatred. He took that cross as his way of saying he would not compromise with evil. He calls us to carry our crosses for him, too.

Do not put the Lord your God to the test. Do not try to force God into doing what you want rather than what he wills. This is an awesome rebuke of the powers of darkness. It still is.

Jesus went into the desert after the high moment of his baptism. He found himself being pulled in a number of directions. He was tempted to use his powers to satisfy his need. He was tempted to take shortcuts to gratify his ambition. He was tempted to use his unique status with God to exploit that relationship. Had he yielded to any of those temptations he would have been pulled off course. He would have been like the deer hound that started out chasing a buck. A fox crossed the path and the hound began trailing the fox. After a while, a rabbit crossed the path and the hound chased the rabbit. In time a mouse crossed the trail and the hound followed the mouse to its burrow. He had begun trailing a buck and ended up watching a mouse hole.

Jesus would have none of that. So he won, for the time being, because verse 12 says the devil left him until an opportune time. Opportunity may knock only once, but temptation rings forever. Let us beware.

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, God's Most Unmistakable, by Don M. Aycock