Luke 4:1-13 · The Temptation of Jesus
The Devil Quotes Scriputure, Too
Luke 4:1-13
Sermon
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I will always remember the immortal words of Flip Wilson’s "Geraldine:" "The devil made me do it!" She said those words with a gleam in her eye which let you know just how enjoyable yielding to temptation really was. Temptation has come on hard times in our day. It has come to mean little more than resistance to a hot-fudge sundae when you are on a diet, or turning down a piece of chocolate cake. At most, resisting temptation seems to mean no more than the self-discipline it takes to stay away from something we know is bad for us.

Each year the lectionary begins Lent with the story of Jesus’ temptation, after 40 days in the wilderness. Perhaps this is done in order to remind us that it might possibly be a healthy thing for us to walk through the wilderness and learn to face temptation as well. This may seem a strange suggestion, since common sense would say that the best way to avoid yielding to temptation would be to stay away from it whenever possible. But who, after all, sent Jesus to be tempted? The gospels say, variously, that Jesus was led, driven or dragged into the wilderness by the Spirit of God. Jesus was led to temptation by the same God who, only a short time before, at his baptism, had declared: "This is my beloved Son!"

In that deathly and dangerous wilderness, what terrible things was Jesus tempted to do? Let’s take a moment to set a ground rule here: to be a temptation, something must be tempting. This may not be as obvious as it seems. For example, my children, who freely offer to give up the temptation of spinach for Lent. If it is not tempting, if it does not have some real and strong attraction for you in the first place, it cannot be called a temptation! With what did the devil tempt Jesus? "If you are the Son of God, command this stone to become bread." Bread? He was hungry and his world was hungry, here was his chance: "Jesus, I know you’re the Son of God, but since we’re out here all by ourselves in this wilderness and you need a bite to eat and there are no grocery stores handy - why don’t you just turn these stones to bread - nobody else will see but us."

Interestingly enough, Jesus answers by quoting Moses in Deuteronomy 8, when he was remembering how the people of Israel failed to trust God to feed them in the wilderness, and God had to give them manna to keep them from fleeing back to Egypt. So Jesus says: "Man shall not live by bread alone." But if not, then by what? Well, for one thing, in the wilderness by the promise that God would bring them through safely. The temptation is for us not to trust in God, but to make sure. I see this temptation in the prosperity preachers of television evangelism, who say that if you only believe in God enough, everything in your life will be wonderful; and, if everything is not wonderful, that means you do not believe in God enough. This is the same temptation Jesus rejected: the temptation not to trust God when times are tough. Especially in the wilderness do we need to trust God day-by-day to bring us through.

When Jesus does not buy the devil’s pitch for prosperity ("all the bread you can eat"), next the devil tries to tempt him with power - power to do good. "You can have all the power you want, think of all the good you will be able to do with so much power." Even the church has felt this temptation, and has often yielded to it. But it is so tempting to think you might be able to shape the destiny of the world, change the course of history. It was tempting to medieval popes and their armies, to 19th century missionaries, to social justice advocates of the left and the moral majority of the right. And all would use that power for good, of course. But Jesus says no, no to power.

Finally, the devil quotes Scripture at Jesus one last time - which proves the truth of the old saying I have used as the title of this sermon. And it is interesting, though I don’t know exactly what it means, that while Jesus quotes Deuteronomy loosely, the devil quotes Psalm 91 quite accurately. What is the temptation here? What possible appeal could there be for Jesus to throw himself off the pinnacle of the temple? To know that he is invincible, that nothing could ever hurt him? If you knew that, what would you ever have to fear? It certainly would give you a tremendous sense of security.

The devil, in fact, tempts Jesus with good things, not bad. The devil tempts Jesus with things we would all like. All three temptations fit popular expectations of the Messiah; that the Messiah would be a Moses who would feed the people, a David ruling in peace and justice and a Son of Man carried along on clouds of glory. This was what everyone knew the Messiah would be. Everyone except Jesus.

I believe that in the temptation the devil performed a very important function for God. The devil tempted Jesus to be what all the people (from their study of Scripture) expected he would be. The devil offers these temptations to Jesus one by one, giving him the opportunity to reject them before they are offered to him, much more subtly and ever so much more dangerously, in the adoring voices of his followers. We all know how easy it is to be trapped by others’ expectations of us. People around us expect us to act in a certain way, and by and large we do; even, at times, against our better judgment. Jesus was vulnerable also. The devil did God’s will by bringing before Jesus the temptations he needed to confront. The real danger was not that he would yield to these temptations in the wilderness, but that by failing to confront them there he would, without being aware it was happening, find himself acquiescing to these same temptations out in the world, during his ministry - thereby slipping bit by bit into the devil’s control.

I doubt that anyone, before they take their first drink, makes the decision: "I’m going to be an alcoholic." It is just that one drink follows another because "everybody’s doing it" until they are trapped. Who would choose to be addicted to drugs? They just pop a few pills or sniff a little cocaine because it feels good and it’s the thing to do, and their dependence elevates step by step until they are trapped. This is a different way of understanding temptation. It is not the same as simply having the moral fortitude to avoid something you know is bad for you. The devil tempts with the most exalted hopes in the world. The devil tempts Jesus with what everyone around him knows is the will of God for Jesus. But in this case it is yesterday’s will of God, and God is leading Jesus in a different direction entirely.

The way of prosperity, power and protection is not for him. His is the way of service, suffering and sacrifice. Everybody knows that God wants him to succeed - but Jesus knows that God wants him to be the servant of all. Everybody knows that there is a throne in Jesus’ future, and a golden crown - Jesus knows that his throne is the cross and his only crown of thorns. Everybody knows that Jesus is meant to rule the earth (and they are to rule with him) - Jesus knows that he is to give his life for the salvation of the world and that they, too, must die to their old lives to live for God.

It is so easy to be tempted by what "everybody knows;" to be caught by what everybody expects we will be and do in this life. It is a temptation we just find ourselves sliding into bit by bit, until one day we wake up to find we’re feeling sort of cynical and jaded about life and that we have forgotten the promises of God who called us out of the wilderness and promised to make us a new creation altogether. This is the worst temptation of all - to be tempted away from hope. In Jesus Christ, God came into the world to do a new thing - an unexpected thing. In Jesus Christ, God came into the world to call people like you and like me, even when we are in the wilderness, to live a life of service, of grateful acceptance of God’s love. Jesus calls us to a life full of hope for the future and the expectation that God will do, even in us, a new thing. It is the temptation to forget all this as we find our own way through life that makes the devil so dangerous.

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