Pastor Sherry’s message for March 9, 2025
Scriptures: Deut 25:1-11; Ps 92:1-15; Ro 10:8-13; Luke 4:1-13
Oscar Wilde, the Irish poet and playwright of the mid to late 1800’s once said, ”I can resist everything but temptation.” Probably many of us can say the same. Another fellow from the Funny Papers complained to a pastor, “How come opportunity knocks once, but temptation beats down my door every day?”
(Charles Swindoll, the Tale of the Tardy Oxcart, Word Publishing, 1998, pp.560, 562.)
It would seem that there is no end to things that tempt us: Perhaps you have given up cussing for Lent, then accidentally trip over your dog, or close your hand in your car door? Immediately you find yourself swearing away
Or, you plan to forgive a certain aggravating person, do so, and then find they aggravate you all over again the very next time you meet up with them? I was once told by a person enrolled at one of the service academies that their honor code was so widely adhered to that you could leave a $100 dollar bill out on a desk and no one would take it. I truly hope our war-fighters-in-training are as honorable; but I have to wonder if laying out a temptation like that—even among honorable persons—is very smart.
Our adversary, the Devil, comes at us with temptations. He loves to try to make us doubt God’s goodness. But if that doesn’t work, he’ll come up with a temptation to pull us away from our part in God’s story. (Think of the word history. As a former high school history teacher, I have come to the conclusion that the passage of time carries God’s story—He oversees history; it is His story and He invites us to participate.) The Apostle Peter knew this well. He famously warned us (1 Peter 5:8, NIV) Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.
So how are we to avoid the traps he sets for us? What’s the secret to frustrating the evil one? What strategies does Jesus model to enable us to conquer our temptations?
Let’s take a look at our Gospel lesson (Luke 4:1-13) for some valuable pointers.
Today’s passage begins with Jesus being sent—by the Holy Spirit—into the wilderness for a time of testing. The Father knew our Lord needed to be tested before He began His earthly ministry. Both Jesus and the Father knew He needed to prove that He could recognize Satan’s temptations and resist them. In a sense, the Father had Jesus begin His public ministry just as Adam and Eve had begun the human story, with a test. They were commanded not to eat from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. And we now know they failed the test. Satan seduced or tempted them; and to their and our everlasting regret, they fell for it.
If we read Dr. Luke’s genealogy of Jesus at the end of Chapter 3, we see that Jesus, the Son of God, is descended from Adam (on His mother’s side). He could be said to be the Son of God and also a descendant son of Adam.
Paul and others call our Lord the 2nd Adam. Will He be taken in like the 1st Adam was? Will he fall for Satan’s ploy to feed Himself by turning stones into bread? Notice the situation is similar, but the setting differs. Adam and Eve were ensconced in a beautiful garden where all their needs were met.
But Jesus is tempted in a barren wilderness. His ancestors, the Israelites, wandered in the wilderness for 40 years. God is inviting Jesus to re-enact, in 40 days, not only Adam and Eve’s trial, but that of Jesus’ Israelite ancestors as well. And we see—Praise God!—that the 2nd Adam, the perfect Israelite, does it better.
Normally, our Lord would want Jesus to eat when He was hungry. But during this 40 days (the precursor to Lent), He had dedicated Himself to a fast. (This is why so many Christians decide to spend these 40 days of Lent in some sort of fast.) Jesus was focusing all His attention on His relationship with His Heavenly Father. But He was most likely also physically and emotionally depleted. Isn’t it just like Satan to come at us when we are particularly vulnerable because we are tired or hungry? He was also alone, away from the potential support of home and family. I think this latter factor plays into marital affairs on business trips. There is no one around and a person becomes vulnerable due to fatigue and stress and no reminders of a family waiting at home.
So Satan’s first temptation to Jesus was to have something He was not meant to have. There nothing sinful about bread, in and of itself.
But eating at this time would have distracted Him from His retreat with His Heavenly Father. So it is with us, isn’t it? There’s nothing wrong with good food, nice clothes, a beautiful home, a snazzy car, a prestigious job—unless our pursuit of them comes between us and God. Jesus knew He wasn’t to eat then, so He refused Satan’s temptation, and quoted Scripture to him🡪NLT, Deuteronomy 8:2 & 3 Remember how the Lord your God led you through the wilderness for these 40 years, humbling you and testing you to prove your character, and to find out whether or not you would obey His commands. Yes, He humbled you by letting you go hungry and then feeding you with manna, a food previously unknown by you and your ancestors. He did it to teach you that people do not live by bread alone; rather, we live by every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord.
Jesus’ 2nd temptation was to be someone He was not meant to be. Satan thought to tempt Jesus with becoming an earthly ruler. Satan is the Prince of this world, but He did not then and does not now have the power to make someone king of the world. Only God can do this. So, notice, Satan was lying, wasn’t he? He will also lie to us. Jesus says in the Gospel of John that Satan is the Father of Lies and that lies are his native language.
He will tempt us to become something we are not meant to be. It might be to become popular, famous, rich, or influential. It might be to be married, or to raise a household of kids. God may even have these things in mind for us—but not just now, or not under our current circumstances. Additionally, the cost of caving in to the temptation is turning our backs on God’s plan for our lives.
Again, notice that Jesus quotes Scripture in his response to Satan: (NLT, Deuteronomy 6:13 & 14) You must fear [revere, worship] the Lord your God and serve Him. You must not worship any of the gods of neighboring nations, for the Lord your God, who lives among you is a jealous God. Jesus wisely only wanted to please God. Jesus wisely determined only to worship God.
His 3rd temptation was to do things He was not meant to do.
Satan wanted Jesus to perform a miracle and save Himself from falling/suspending the law of gravity. But our Lord knew He was not to get ahead of the will of the Father. Satan believes he has the victory when he tempts us to act carelessly or recklessly, assuming God will rescue us from whatever is foolhardy. Jesus knew it is not our place to test God by taking ridiculous risks to see if He rescues us from our own foolishness. We were not meant to abuse our bodies and minds with alcohol or drugs; engage in sexual relations outside of marriage; explode with anger; cheat, steal from, or lie to God or another, etc.
The truth is that each of Satan’s temptations—of Jesus and of us—is to shortcut God’s plans for us. He wants to seduce us away from God’s story for our lives. He promises the easy way of no hardship, no suffering, and no Cross. But Jesus stood strong against Satan. He said, essentially, that His life was about more than satisfying His bodily appetites;more than having worldly power; and more than personal safety. He made it clear that His life was about doing His Father’s will.
A preacher named Bryan Wilkerson once wrote, “So Jesus was tempted along these three lines—to have something, to be somebody, and to do something other than [what] God intended. In other words, Jesus was being tempted to break away from God’s story.” And so are we.
(Sermon on Jesus’ Temptations, http://www.PreachingToday.com, 3/5/25.)
Fortunately, He also teaches us to conquer temptations by asking ourselves the following:
1. Is what we want something God would not want us to have?(Or not to have yet, at this exact moment?
2. Is it to become something God does not mean for us to be?
3. It is to do something God would not want us to do?
In studying this passage, I firmly believe that all of our temptations can be put in one of these three categories. Just stopping to consider which category a given temptation exists in might be just enough to help us avoid it.
Jesus also models…
1. Relying on the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,
2. Knowing and following Scripture,
3. And checking things out in conversations with the Father. There are some excellent strategies for turning away from temptation. May we remember these this Lent, and always. Thanks be to God who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Alleluia, Alleluia!
©️2025 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams