| TEMPTATIONS
And Jesus being full of the
Holy Ghost returned from Jordan, and was led by the Spirit
into the wilderness, being forty days tempted of the
devil.
-- Luke
4:1-2
There is a pattern that
encompasses the history of all mankind: the first Adam
and the second Adam. That first Adam fails a
temptation, and by his failure condemns all his children to
death. When the test is offered a second time to the Second
Adam, he passes and saves all his children. That is the
great glory of Christ’s temptation by the devil, but we have
to ask, is there also an example there to help
us? Can we find any strength there for our daily
temptations?
OUR FORERUNNER
It’s difficult for us to grasp
how closely Christ is identified with us, his children.
Hebrews 4:15 tell us that he was tempted in all ways as we
are, yet without sin. What consolation! He knows
what we suffer because he has suffered all the same himself,
in flesh like ours. For that reason we can come boldly
to the throne of grace for mercy, because Christ our elder
brother and high priest sits there, well knowing our
weakness.
BEADS WITHOUT A STRING
Is the whole Bible just
unrelated incidents and wise sayings, without any relation to
one another? Or does some theme thread all these beads
together?
That thread is Christ. In his
very name, Jesus – Jehovah saves – we find the meaning
of the Scriptures. The love of God in Christ toward mankind
strings all the beads together. And since the Bible is the
perfect revelation of God, every story there must serve
some necessary purpose.
But how does the bead of
Christ’s temptation fit in? It’s a cosmic make-up test. Christ
passes the test that Adam failed. Without the temptation,
Christ's sacrifice would not have been possible. To become the
perfect sacrifice for our sins, he had to face and
overcome them himself.
THE FIRST TEMPTATION
After forty days without food,
we are told, Christ became hungry. Yet Satan’s temptation
didn’t aim at his hunger but at his faith in
God.
"You’re hungry by now. You
deserve something to eat, but God is stingy. God is
holding out on you. God is not paying attention, so you’ll
have to take matters into your own hands or starve." Satan
attacks Christ’s faith first, so that after destroying
his faith he could drive him into unlawful methods of getting
his food.
And there we are. Whenever we
distrust the secret providence of God – unseen but
always acting – we are driven to prostitute ourselves in all
sorts of wicked ways: fraud, theft, lies, usury, violence,
oppression, adultery, murder. But the sin begins with
doubting the providence of God: He has forsaken
me.
Rather than yield, we ought to
answer with Job, "Yet though he slay me will I trust him." For
what is life worth if to sustain it we offend God and condemn
ourselves for all eternity? Better a lingering and painful
death by starvation.
Oh, you may answer,
but all men have their price. Yours is just higher than
most. No, by the power of the Holy Ghost we have no
price, because we have been redeemed with the price no man
can pay, the precious blood of the Lamb. That blood has
freed us from the logic of unbelief, the wisdom of
"practical men" who whisper, ‘Why do you cling to your
principles? Go along to get along." That is our daily
temptation.
Think about Christ’s answer.
"Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that
proceeds from the mouth of God." It is as if he had said, "You
tell me to devise some expedient, some trick God doesn’t
permit, or else I’ll starve. But that would be to distrust
God, and I have no reason to doubt he will keep his
promises. You say his favour is confined to physical bread,
but he says even if I have nothing to eat, his blessing
alone will nourish me, and I believe that and rest on it.
I will live or die by that promise." There
is no other answer.
Note that Christ responds, "It
is written." If we want to overcome temptation, we can fight
with no other weapon. Paul calls it "the sword of the spirit"
which we are to use with the "shield of faith.". In obedience
to God’s word lies our only safety. But every weapon requires
exercise and training. Can you or I fight with Satan without
training ourselves daily in his word? Hardly.
Where did Christ find this
written? Deuteronomy 8:3 When no bread could be found,
God fed his people with miracle bread, manna. Real food for
real people, as the Lord’s Supper.
But God’s "word" here embraces
more than just the express words of the Bible. It
includes the active will and good pleasure of God, his
expressed will to uphold all his creation and his people. "He
upholdeth all things by the power of his word." The universe
is not on autopilot. God is actively, attentively flying the
plane.
We confess that fact every time
we ask him to bless our food. We confess that although we live
on bread, it is not the bread itself, but the secret
kindness of God that makes the bread nourish our bodies.
Otherwise we might as well eat so much sawdust.
THE SECOND TEMPTATION
Having failed with food, the
devil now tempts Christ with power. The only catch is, he has
to worship Satan to get it. "You can obtain the inheritance
God has promised you in some way other than the way he
decrees. Step lively there! Become `the master of your fate
and the captain of your own soul.’ Think of all the
good you can do with that power."
As usual, the Devil begins with
a lie, and how daring is his insolence. He steals from God
the government of the whole world! But is his lie worse
than many Christians today, who claim that the Devil is the
"prince and ruler of this world"? Is the earth really Satan’s,
and the fullness thereof?
If they really believe that, how
do they differ from the rest of the world? Most men believe
everything good comes from Satan. And even we, who know
we depend on the blessing of God, still allow our senses to
seduce us to seek Satan’s help, as if God alone were not
enough.
How do we know this is true? If
men did not believe it was in Satan’s power to bestow good,
then why would they resort to every wicked scheme –murder not
excepted – to get what they want? Why use Satan’s methods
unless they are convinced Satan is in charge and more powerful
than God? With their mouths they may ask, "Give us this day
our daily bread" but in their hearts they believe Satan
distributes all the goodies in the world.
Once again, Christ uses the same
weapon, the sword of the spirit. Only God is to be worshipped
and served. Whether we give our devotion to wife or husband,
house or lands, animals, food or drink, or Satan himself,
whenever we give the glory due God to any creature, we
hideously profane his rightful worship.
THE THIRD TEMPTATION
Satan then tempts Christ to
exalt himself against God, to rise up against God and dare him
not to help. As a denial of the providence of God, the first
temptation tempts Christ to use unlawful means.
This temptation, however, twists providence another way.
It refuses to use the means at hand while
simultaneously demanding other and better means from
God.
Satan tempts Christ to
neglect the ordinary, unglamorous means which God
has provided and to throw himself unnecessarily into
mortal danger. In other words, to act like a lot of Christians
who tempt God by refusing to use – and for the time being
satisfy themselves with – the means which God has provided at
hand. They demand other means more to their liking, and
foolishly put themselves into unnecessary danger.
Notice that Satan quotes Psalm
91, but he twists it. We ought to remember that.
Satan never plays fair. He knows no out of
bounds. He never attacks where and while you are strong, but
where and while you are weak. Here is yet
another reason we must exercise the sword of the spirit,
to recognise and parry every false thrust. Otherwise Satan
will take the very tool of our salvation and use it to destroy
us.
But Christ refuses to give up
his weapon to the enemy. He doesn’t say, "Well, you have a
Ph.D. in theology and a string of degrees, so I guess I can’t
argue with you." No, he quotes the plain Scripture right back
at him to refute his lie. We have no other weapon. Even when
wicked men cover their fraud with Scripture, we still have no
defence other than the Scripture.
What did Satan leave out in his
quotation? Yes, it is true God sends his angels to guard us,
but not if we walk outsides the bounds of God’s
commandments. Satan says to Christ, "If you will expose
yourself to death, contrary to the will of God, the
angels will protect your life." What would you think of a
Christian who robs a bank, gets shot in the robbery, and then
complains that God didn’t protect him?
Christ answers, "Thou shalt not
tempt the Lord thy God." Can you rely on his promises without
obeying his commandments? By what right do we expect his help
if we refuse to humbly submit ourselves to his
guidance?
Whoever leaves the means that
God, in his Fatherly goodness, provides and recommends, and
decides to test God’s power and might, tempts God. It’s
as if you cut off a man’s legs, then ordered him to run. But
whenever we tempt God by subjecting him to an unfair trial,
we will shortly find out who is really in
charge.
THE DEVIL LEFT
But note, only for a while. In
the same way God so orders our lives so that after we have
suffered an exhausting trial, he gives us a breather, a chance
to gather our strength and wits and courage for the next
battle. Matthew and Mark both report that angels waited on
him. Think of that. Angels, the whole host of heaven,
mighty angels, waited on him.
And they wait on
you.
What do you need that God has
not provided, and will not provide? And what has God provided,
that you do not need – even the temptations? "Ignorance of the
providence of God is the cause of all impatience."
If we can just keep before our
eyes, in our present knowledge, this truth -- that God our
Father provides everything we need, never more nor less
– that he upholds us moment by moment by the power of his Word
-- that he guards us with a power even greater than his holy
angels, and more, that he has provided a Great High Priest who
has already tasted our sorrows and temptations and overcome
them all and will at the last wipe away every tear from
our eyes -- then how can we ever doubt that Christ is
leading us from victory to victory?
-- F. Sanders
1. The parallel passages are
Luke 4:1-13; Matthew 4:1-11; Mark 1:12-13. 2. Romans 5:12-21; 1 Corinthians 15:22,
45-50 3. Hebrews
4:15 4. Ephesians
6:16-17 5. 1 Corinthians
10:1-4 6. Hebrews
1:3 7. Romans
1:18-32
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