Luke 4:1-13 · The Temptation of Jesus
Would You Take The Crown Without The Cross?
Luke 4:1-13
Sermon
by Brett Blair
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The local sheriff was looking for a deputy, and one of the applicants - who was not known to be the brightest academically, was called in for an interview. "Okay," began the sheriff, "What is 1 and 1?" "Eleven," came the reply. The sheriff thought to himself, "That's not what I meant, but he's right." 

Then the sheriff asked, "What two days of the week start with the letter 'T'?" "Today & tomorrow." Replied the applicant. The sheriff was again surprised over the answer, one that he had never thought of himself. 

"Now, listen carefully, who killed Abraham Lincoln?", asked the sheriff. The job seeker seemed a little surprised, then thought really hard for a minute and finally admitted, "I don't know." The sheriff replied, "Well, why don't you go home and work on that one for a while?" The applicant left and wandered over to his pals who were waiting to hear the results of the interview. He greeted them with a cheery smile, "The job is mine! The interview went great! First day on the job and I'm already working on a murder case!" 

In our Gospel reading this morning in Luke 4 it is Jesus' first day on the job. Immediately he is confronted with three major temptations. And he is confronted with this basic question: Would he take the crown without the cross? 

These are the most basic temptations in life and they form the foundation for all other temptations. I would propose that when temptation comes our way; if we will pause and classify the temptation, we would be able to identify it with one of the three temptations Jesus faced. We will also be better equipped to answer Satan with the words and obedience of Christ. 

This is the first Sunday in Lent. It is a time of in-depth reflection upon the passion and death of Jesus, as well as a period of repentance for both the church and for us personally. Our Lenten journey begins this year with a review of the temptation of Christ. At the beginning of his ministry, Jesus spent forty days and forty nights in the Wilderness, to be in communion with God and to reflect upon his upcoming ministry. While there, Satan confronts Jesus. It is reminder to us that goodness is not synonymous with innocence. True goodness comes only after a struggle with evil.

Let's look at the three temptations:

The first temptation we shall call: Stone into Bread - The temptation to use power for the wrong purposes. In the first temptation, Satan addresses Jesus by saying, “If, you are the Son of God.” It may look as if Satan is questioning Jesus’ credentials but he is not. He never questions the credentials of Jesus. He knows who he is. What he is doing is trying to get Jesus to question himself, to doubt. If he can get Jesus for just a moment to question himself, to misuse his power, to take the crown without the cross, to turn the stone into bread, he will have won, and he will have forced Jesus into seducing humanity into obedience. You see this not just about Jesus being hungry after fasting for 40 days. This is Satan tempting Jesus to met need of world hunger. Use your power, the devil says, to address the issue of human hunger. Jesus would have sought to buy our affection and devotion.

But that is a false picture of mankind. We do not live for things but for intimacy. We do not live for the marketplace but for the family. Jesus put it this way, “man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God.” 

Satan has misunderstood mankind and therefore misunderstood Jesus’ need. To be sure, he sees that he is hungry. What he does not understand is that there is another type of hunger. It is the hunger for righteousness. Jesus is feeding himself on the Word of God. Satan has challenged Jesus to feed a hungry world. What Jesus is saying is that you cannot know what is good unless you first read the scriptures. We are created to please God, to be in right relationship with God, and we must therefore go to God’s Word. 

It is easy to loose track of who we are and why we are here. It is a now very long time since we were in the Garden. Sin has wrecked humanity. It is difficult to imagine what man was like in the Garden of Eden by viewing him as he is now. Imagine if you knew nothing of aircrafts and mankind’s ability of flight. Now imagine that you came upon the wreckage of an aircraft and you along with many others tried to reconstruct the original version of the aircraft. If we knew nothing of flying, we would hardly suspect that this pile of rubbish had once soared above the earth. The material would be the same; the capability of flight, however, would be lost. 

What we have lost is our understanding of what mankind once was: obedient, righteous, the image of God, and a reflection of the divine. This is what Jesus reminds Satan. Bread is not how mankind lives, not solely, and not primarily. He lives in obedience to the word of God. If we come to God we come because we belong with him not because he has something for us. We come because our soul needs to be in his presence not because our belly needs to be filled. 

Satan asks, wouldn’t you rather have your desires met first, your cravings satisfied in full? Wouldn’t you rather take the crown without the cross? 

II 

The second temptation we shall call: Fall on the Rocks: The Temptation to gain popularity by performance. And if the first temptation deals with the physical needs of Jesus, then the second deals with his reputation. The devil sits Jesus on the pinnacle of the Temple. “Jump off,” he said, “for it is written, He shall give his angels charge over you, to keep you in all ways.” This is a quote from Psalm 91. Do you see what has happened? In the first temptation Jesus has answered Satan by saying, “It is written.” Satan is a fast learner. He begins this temptation with the words, “It is written.” He is showing Jesus that he is capable of quoting scripture as well. 

Jesus refuses to jump, however, quoting from yet another verse, “You shall not tempt the Lord your God.” This is a quote from Duet 6.16. Does this mean that the Book of Deuteronomy is more important than the Psalms? No. But it does say that simply quoting scripture is not enough. Even Satan can do that. It is the interpretation that we give to scripture that matters. You cannot manipulate scripture for your own purpose, or even for what we perceive to be the purposes of God. 

Said another way, we cannot accomplish the will of God by our own efforts. Abraham tried to do this when he lay with his maidservant Hagar and had Ishmael. God’s response was, Abraham I told you that Sarah shall have a son. In time, God’s promise is fulfilled and Isaac is born, but there is a problem. The promise of God must now be taken from the first born son, Ishmael and given to the second, Isaac. Jealousy sets in and in the end Hagar and Ishmael’s lives are ruined when they are banished from the tribe, all this because Abraham tried to force God’s promise. 

You do not test a promise of God. Try to accomplish it by your own means. Even if those means are backed up with Scripture. Jesus cannot do a right thing for a wrong reason. Satan asks, wouldn’t you rather avoid the long way to accomplishing your goal? Wouldn’t you rather avoid the path that requires patience? Wouldn’t you rather circumvent suffering? Wouldn’t you rather take the crown without the cross? 

III 

The third temptation we shall call: Serve the Wrong Master: The temptation to idolatry. In the third temptation, Satan finally comes out in the open. He no longer flatters him by calling him Son of God. He shows Jesus all of the kingdoms of the world and tells him that all of this will be his, if, for a just moment, he will bow down and worship him. He is saying, “You want people to follow you, do you not? Then simply blink your eyes at evil and they will come in droves.” 

But Jesus refuses to change the world by becoming a part of the world. Again he quotes from Moses in the Old Testament: “You shall worship the Lord your God and He alone shall you serve.” If the world comes to Jesus it must rise up to Him, for He will not go down to it. He will not be enticed by the glitter of the world. 

The trial is now over. Satan has failed in his attempt to bribe Jesus with fame, fortune, and power. At this point Jesus says, “Satan, be gone.” The implication is that Jesus has merely been tolerating the presence of Satan. But the devil does not go away empty handed. He still has all of his kingdoms and he now knows something about the nature of God. He understands God’s restraint. 

Conclusion 

Another important matter is that we cannot see this temptation in the Wilderness as the only time Jesus encountered evil. Clearly, he faced it over and over. Take, for example, when Jesus turned His face to Jerusalem. It was Simon Peter who tried to talk him out of it by saying, in essence, “You don’t have to do this.” 

Additionally, there was the scene when Jesus was on the cross. The centurion taunts him and says, “If you are the Son of God, then jump down from the cross and save yourself.” This scene sounds hauntingly familiar to the scene where Satan challenges Jesus to jump. So Jesus struggled with evil and temptation over and over. 

The crucial question for us this morning is, what does all of this mean for us? The ultimate temptation of Jesus was that He could have a crown without a cross. That is the temptation that we, His followers, still face today. We want power without painful rejection. We want risk with no danger. We want victory with limited commitment.

Some Christians say that to be a Christian means that life is all beautiful. It strikes me that the Temptation of Christ is saying something quite different. It is saying life is a struggle; life is a wilderness experience. You will be tempted by evil. 

So I want to remind you today, in those times when you are in the wilderness, trying to find your way through, and when temptation comes and offers you the wrong answer, the wrong choice the wrong use of power, the way to popularity, the wrong kind of partnership then you remember that Christ was tempted as well. But he did not turn those stones into bread. He fed himself the word of God. He did not fling himself upon the rocks. He wanted no man’s approval but God’s. He did not render service to Satan. He obeyed his father in Heaven. And this, I suppose is the twist ending of Lent. If Jesus saves himself, he cannot save you. Jesus was tempted to take the crown without the cross and he did not. Would you?   

ChristianGlobe Network, Collected Sermons, by Brett Blair