Sunday, February 17, 2002

Lent 1

May my words and my thoughts be acceptable to you, O Lord, my refuge and my redeemer. (Psalm 19:14)

SEASON: Lent 1
PROPER: A
PLACE: St. John's Parish, Kingsville
DATE: February 17, 2002

TEXT: Matthew 4:1-11 - The Temptation of Christ Jesus
Jesus said, "Away with you, Satan! for it is written, 'Worship the Lord your God, and serve only him.'"

ISSUE: This well crafted story, based on Israel's temptations wandering in the desert reveals the obedience and the true sonship of Jesus. In him and through him, we find our hope. Each of us struggles with our various temptations, shortcomings, and our slips in life. Jesus Christ who also struggled with temptation and the desire to discern who and what his life was about remained obedient and faithful. He is our hope, and the faithful servant who shows us the way to God.
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The Temptation of Jesus in the wilderness is thought to be a neatly crafted story in Matthew's Gospel. It depicts by and large a truly struggling Jesus. The account is best understood when we keep it in context in terms of when it supposedly happened, and it is also best understood in the context of Hebrew history, and the cultural aspects of the time.
It is very important to know that the Temptation of Jesus immediately follows Matthew's account of Jesus' baptism. John baptizes him. A dove comes down upon him, a spirit lights upon him, and voice from heaven is heard: "This is my own dear Son, with whom I am pleased." What follows is that a "spirit" leads Jesus into the wilderness to be tempted, or tested. He has had a great honor bestowed upon him, God's beloved Son. The testing is to determine if this is a true honor. Is he deserving of the title? Thus, spirits, the Devil, then tests Jesus.
It is important for us to appreciate that in this time the belief in spirits was a part of the culture. Spirits, both good and bad, were believed to be everywhere according to the lore of the time. They were particularly rampant in the wilderness areas. People wore amulets and often painted their doorsteps and window frames blue. Charms were worn to ward off evil and mischievous spirits. This practice was common to the period. However, note that none of the accounts of Jesus' temptation report him to be wearing blue clothing or any kind of protection. He is strictly on his own. Jesus is totally vulnerable to the spirit world.
Jesus goes into the wilderness for a period of forty days and nights. This period of time immediately associates Jesus with Moses and Elijah, highly honored leaders and prophets of Hebrew History. But what's more, and is important to appreciate is that the temptations are also very similar to Israel's wandering in the wilderness after their flight from Egyptian oppression under the leadership of Moses. Jesus is identified as the Son of God, but so had Israel been identified as God’s son. In the book of Exodus 4:22-23, Moses is instructed by God to tell Pharaoh, "Israel is my first born son". . let my son go so that he may worship me.
Jesus, Son of God, like Israel, is faced with three significant temptations:
First, The evil spirit challenges Jesus to turn stones to bread, but Jesus responds with a quotation from Deuteronomy 8:3, "One does not live by bread alone but by every word that comes from the mouth of God." When Israel had wondered in the desert the people had complained to Moses of their hunger. This hunger was seen as a testing that they must trust God. But the people were rebellious and disobedient, and cantankerous. They did not pass the test.
The Second temptation, Satan takes Jesus to the holy city (Jerusalem) and places him on the pinnacle of the temple and dares him to jump, quoting Psalm 91:11-12 "He will command his angels concerning you." and "On their hands they will bear you up, so that you will not dash your foot against a stone." Jesus quotes again a passage from Deut. 6:16, "Do not put the Lord your God to the test, as you did at Massah." It refers to another time when Israel tested God, and complained and distrusted God's protection of them. Here, Jesus recognizes it is he who is being tested, and it is inappropriate for him to test God. He remains obedient and faithful.
The third temptation, when the Devil takes Jesus up on a high mountain. High Mountains are always a special place of revelation for Matthew, like the Transfiguration Story of last week. Satan offers all the kingdoms of the world for but one moment of worship and adoration. Again Jesus responds from Deuternonomy 6:13: "Have reverence for the Lord your God, worship only him, and make your promises in his name alone." Israel, wondering in the desert, had failed to be faithful and obedient. But Jesus passes the test, and is true to his Sonship.
In Matthew's account of Jesus' temptation, I believe that Matthew is making two important points to his readers. The Israelites in their humanness failed to be obedient and trusting. Adam and Eve, Genesis’ symbol of all men and women, from the beginning had failed to be obedient, and succumbed to the temptation to eat from the forbidden tree. The world needed a messianic figure, a person of great obedience and faith to be the savior and salvation for God's people. They needed one who could master the evil spirits, deny them, and influences of the world. Matthew wants his readers to know that this Jesus was tempted as they were all the sons and daughters of God. He was confronted by the same powers that they had known and knew. But Jesus was faithful and obedient to this point. He alone passed the testing and maintained the title, Son of God, in the most profound sense. He does not succumb to temptations to be a big shot, to be magical, and a triumphant militant leader. His power is in his faithful obedience to God the Father. He obeys and accepts the word and teaching of God. And the good spirits, the angels, came and ministered to him.
A second important point is that Jesus' forty days in the wilderness, after his baptism, is a time of discernment. It is a time of reflection on the kind of life he will lead, in his case, what will be the shape of his messiahship. There are those who dare to say that it is plausible that Jesus could have become the Emperor of Rome. That thought might be presuming too much. But it is likely that Jesus could have become another militant messianic leader. The social and political situation in the time was ripe for that. Instead he leaves the wilderness prepared to take on the role of a suffering servant, as opposed to one to be served. He associates with the poor and raises them up, and gives them a profound sense of esteem, healing, and assurance that God is with them, that they are loved and adored by the creator. He conveys the presence of God in their lives. In their fallen nature he assures that God will reconcile and redeem and take them back. That spirited and spiritual anointed one will not merely last for a political seasons, or dynasty, but will last forever.
As we enter into the Lenten Season, and into this story, we might become aware of the various temptations and the failings of our own lives. Whether we believe in “evil spirits” or not, there are times when people will say, “I don’t know what got into me.” A parent says to a misbehaving child, “What in the world has gotten into you?” As the comedian Flip Wilson’s comic caricature Geraldine says, “The devil made me do it?” And we do laugh at and identify with Geraldine. The fact of the matter is that we are all tempted, and temptations in our culture are everywhere. You can call them evil spirits or not, but temptations are there, and we need to take full responsibility for our actions.
Today people are more inclined to take more responsibility for their actions. We laugh at Flip Wilson's Geraldine whose comic line that made us laugh was, "The Devil made me do it." While we may not believe in spirits like in Jesus' time, there may well be feelings and remembrances of times when we acted in such ways that were out of character. While we can be good people, there are other times when we are not. There are temptations to which we succumb. Some are easily tempted by sexual persuasions. Some are given to dishonesty and cheating. Some cannot give up their racial prejudices and the inappropriate character that is passed on from generation to generation. Some are caught up in the various things we will confess in the Litany of Penitence we will be using later in the service today.
We truly need the salvation and the grace, the hand of God, which is extended to us in Christ to lift of from the mire of our lives. For Christ Jesus alone was in the mire too and was the way of hope and salvation for us. Angels, the good spirits came and ministered to him.
This is a season for our reflection and discerning what kind of life we shall I live. What are my spiritual goals? How am I going to express my faithful obedience to God though the kind of life I shall live? What kind of a new Son or Daughter of God shall I become as we make our way with Christ Jesus to Easter together? There were temptations for Adam and Eve. There were temptations for the people of Israel. There were bad times of not living up to what was expected. But God has not left us alone. He has come among us to lead and guide us. To take the hand of Christ who is our Lord and our hope.

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