Our scripture lesson this morning is found in Matthew 4:1-11
The shortest sermon ever recorded, which by the way you
won’t be getting this morning, consisted of the preacher going into the pulpit
and quoting Romans 6:23, “The wages of sin is death”, and adding “there has
been no change in the rate of pay. Amen”. It’s not very fashionable these days
to talk about sin and temptation in church, but this is where my heart and
God’s voice seem to be leading me. We
have all heard the story of the fall of Adam and Eve in Genesis, Paul speaking
of sin and redemption, Adam and Christ in Romans, and the temptations of Jesus
in Matthew’s gospel. When we hear about
Israelis and Palestinians fighting one another, the continuing lack of peace in
Northern Ireland, all the bad and depressing things going on in the world, it’s
so easy to believe in a fallen world. It is just so easy to see how the world has fallen
away from goodness.
Sometimes it is so hard to believe in what Paul says in
Romans? Paul is telling us that even though the world is fallen, everything is
OK because God in Christ loves us, forgives us, and makes all things whole. But
when we see the fallen world, we can find it almost impossible to believe that
this world, of so much darkness and sin, is redeemed and hallowed. Can we
really believe that Christ, the second Adam, showed us God’s goodness, planted
more deeply than all it is wrong? It’s certainly a challenge for us to believe
that.
And then, we have Matthew’s gospel, where we hear about Jesus being tempted by the devil. The story of those temptations is a well-known one, in which simple symbols represent very significant issues. We’re going to look at those three temptations more closely.
The
first temptation is for Jesus to turn the bread into a stone.
This is about doubting God’s goodwill towards us. Jesus was led by the Spirit
into the desert, and became very hungry. No doubt he wonders is God has
forgotten him. The temptation is about more than just a meal, more than just a
stone and a piece of bread. It’s about taking control, making up for God’s
apparent forgetfulness or carelessness, doubting God’s goodwill. Rather like
the serpent insinuates to Eve that God’s motivation was suspect in forbidding
them this fruit: he did not want them to have their eyes opened. Perhaps doubt
of God lies at the root of what is not whole within us? If so, then it needs to
be replaced with trust in God’s ultimate love and goodness, even when God seems
to have deserted us. In the end, Adam and Eve simply thought they knew better
than God did. But Jesus doesn’t turn the bread into a stone; he commits himself
to trust in God’s promise of sustenance in the wilderness.
The
second temptation is for Jesus to throw himself off the Temple,
to be caught by God. When I was a child I used to throw myself off the bar in
our kitchen….knowing that my dad would catch me. I had complete faith that he would. But this was different….This is about trying
to manipulate God to do what we want. It could be something simple like praying
for a lottery jackpot, or it can be much more subtle, like the temptation
presented to Jesus. Why not do something dramatic, to express your faith and
call down a wonderful demonstration of God’s power? Adam and Eve felt that God
could not possibly withhold from them something so obviously good, and so tried
to make God in agreement with them, by taking the fruit.
So often things that we do in the Church, with the best of
intentions, can fall into this trap of trying to box God into a corner so that
he has to act. We can easily set up situations where we force God to act;
manipulating events so that we hope only one course of action can result. But
can we really present God with a fait accompli? All of this begs the question
of why we do the things that we do. Is our desire supremely for God’s glory, or
for our own? Is prayer motivated by self-centred fear, or God-centred trust?
The
third temptation is for Jesus to worship the devil in return for
earthly power. This is about trying to seek our own short cuts to God’s goals.
Jesus wanted to win the kingdoms of the world for God, to wrest them back out
of the clutches of evil. But he cannot win them by worshipping evil, even
though refusing the offer means a long, hard trek to the cross and beyond. Adam
and Eve saw a short cut to wisdom, and took it, and we know what happened after
that. There are no short cuts to spiritual wisdom and maturity - just patient
discipleship in the pathway of God.
When we look at the bad things in world, see and hear evil
at work, every time we listen to the news, it’s so easy to believe in a fallen
world – and so difficult to believe that Christ has redeemed the world, that
God has made everything alright. But by doing that, which is ever so easy, ever
so understandable, and something that we all do, we’re falling victim to the
same temptations that were offered to Jesus. If we can’t really trust in God
and his loving power, believing that his goodness, shown to us in Christ, is
rooted at the deepest level in our world, our lives, our souls, then we might
be in danger of making the mistakes that Jesus might have made.
But how can we trust in God’s goodness, avoid manipulating
God, and not find our own short cuts to God’s purposes? I read a poem entitled
"The Pit." Let me share just a little bit of it with you: If you can, see in your mind’s eye a great
pit: a pit perhaps of your own devising, or perhaps one devised for you by
others. Visualize a pit into which you have fallen and cannot get out of.
A man fell into a pit and he couldn’t get out.
BUDDHA said: "Your pit is only a state of mind."
The HINDU said: "This pit is for purging you and making
you more perfect.”
CONFUCIUS said: "If you would have listened to me, you
would never have fallen into that pit."
A NEW AGE PERSON said: "Maybe you should network with
some other pit dwellers."
A SELF-PITYING PERSON said: "You haven’t seen anything
until you’ve seen my pit."
A NEWS REPORTER said: "Could I have the exclusive story
on your pit?"
A FEDERAL BUREAUCRAT said: "Have you paid your taxes on
that pit?"
A COUNTY INSPECTOR said: "Do you have a permit for that
pit?"
A REALIST said: "That’s a pit."
An IDEALIST said: "The world shouldn’t have pits."
An OPTIMIST said: "Things could be worse."
A PESSIMIST said: "Things will get worse."
BUT JESUS, SEEING THE MAN, TOOK HIM BY THE HAND AND LIFTED
HIM OUT OF THE PIT.
A pit is an awful place to be, particularly a pit created by
the power of sin and temptation. But we are not alone. There is one who has
managed to avoid the pit and who seeks to help us out of the pit. His name is
Jesus, and through him God is able: able
to help; able to save; able to redeem.
Not only is he able - he is willing. And not only is he
willing, he has already acted: acted to save us and to bring to the world a new
day; acted to bring to each of us a new life.
We do not have to dwell in the pit. We do not have to accept
the pit. Rather, we can reach out our hand to the one who has stretched out his
hands for us, and who still reaches out for us today. We can reach out to
Christ, and through Christ reach out to others around us and let them know that
there is a better life, a life that is given freely to all who desire it. This
is our hope of God’s goodness, God’s ultimate loving purposes for us. This is
no vain hope. The fallen nature of our world, however tempting it is to believe
in, is not what God wants for us. Through Jesus, God has shown us his goodness
and his ultimate and complete love for us, planted more deeply than all that is
wrong.
We are just beginning the season of Lent. This is time when
we prepare our hearts and minds to once more live through the events of Holy
Week and Easter, Jesus’ death and resurrection. It is through those events that
we are assured of God’s ultimate and complete love for us, and their totality,
and can know the reality of the God’s hope that is ours.
3 comments:
Beautifully written.
Traveling Suitcase
Loved this: "There are no short cuts to spiritual wisdom and maturity." Very true :)
Visiting from the A-Z Blogging Challenge and hope to see you at The A-Z Theme Reveal on March 21.
Very wise, Friend.
I certainly don't want to be a "Pit-Dweller".
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