Today’s Scripture is very familiar to us. It’s the story about Satan’s temptation of Jesus at the end of Jesus’ forty days in the wilderness. Satan comes to Jesus at what is very probably Jesus’ weakest moment and Jesus is subjected to three temptations. The first one appeals to basic sustenance. The next one appeals to selfishness and ambition. When they fail, Satan tries to use Jesus’ own belief system to trick him into disobedience. We all know the outcome. I thought it might be instructive to look at this old story with a different lens. What might it have looked like to The Great Deceiver? Along the way, there are a couple markers about covenants, the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace, and how far back they go. Let’s take a look at this old story through the eyes of the enemy.
He’s going to be a challenge. It’s that Spirit thing. He’s full of it, you know. Very close to his old man. He talks with him a lot. He goes off by himself and prays. I guess they can communicate that way.
He had his little coming out party last month down by the Jordan River with his crazy cousin the Baptizer. They made a big to-do and he said he was fulfilling the Scripture. I was there. I saw it all. Disgusting. The Big Guy even showed up the way he does, you know. He won’t actually show himself. He just talks in clouds and burning bushes and that sort of thing. Real hocus pocus stuff. My army was all impressed and cowered back in corners. But I’ve seen it all. The only reason he wins is that he doesn’t play fair. He gives them a little dose of that Spirit stuff and the next thing you know, it’s praise time.
I was there in the beginning. Well, almost the beginning. I slithered into the garden all dressed up as one of his pets. I had Adam and Eve eating out of my hand, if you know what I mean. He had already made his deal with them about being obedient in exchange for his protection and all. I busted that so quick. All I had to do was to tell them they could be their own gods, and they fell for it. So much for his Covenant of Works. So what does he do? He comes up with that Grace thing. Cuts a covenant with Abraham and everything.
Well, I didn’t just fall off the cabbage truck. I got Abraham to lie about his own wife. Got Jacob to steal Esau’s birthright. Got Sampson to chase the good life and break all the rules. Got David to chase after a married woman. Then he let them have kings. That was like shooting fish in a barrel. Even the great Solomon chased power through all his marriages. The Bible is full of all these losers. People are easy. I just appeal to their selfish instincts and before you know it, they’ve sold out.
I mean, yeah, there were a few who gave me a hard time. Joseph for one. And Moses and Joshua were just plain tough. Job was an idiot. He should have just checked out instead of putting up with all that. But hey, look at my batting average. I’ve gotten to the best and the brightest over and over again, whether they were paupers or kings.
And what did he do? Grace again. Every time they asked to be forgiven, what do you think he did? You got it. Sure, bud. I forgive you. It’s not fair. He puts out his commandments. I get people to break them, but then he gives them grace! I mean really, is there a rulebook or not?
No matter. I adapt. In all of history, I just keep coming up with ways to get people to be selfish. That’s their nature. They want to please themselves. He says they are made in his image, but look at the evidence. If you ask me, the image is pretty tarnished.
So I was going along pretty good. Maybe a little too good. The next thing I know, here comes Junior to save the whole thing. Apparently the creation thing was getting so far out of whack that he sends the fixer down here to set it all back straight. I thought it was a pretty big compliment to me, but he says it was his plan all along, that that’s what this Grace thing is for to begin with.
So he sends the boy. Gives him all these great names: Wonderful Counselor, Prince of Peace, Messiah. Well, anybody can have a label. I’ve got names too: Satan, Diabolos, Ruler of this Earth, Prince of the Air. We’ll see soon enough what he’s got.
So after his baptism, he went out to the desert. Forty days he’s been out there. No food. No nothing. A rock for a pillow. Hot in the daytime and cold as all get out at night. My kind of environment. Just figure out what’s unbearable to someone and that’s what they get. Of course, cold and hot and hungry and thirsty work for just about anyone. I’ve been giving him little temptations all along the way. He looks bad. Wasted. I think he’s about ready for prime time. This should be easy.
I walked right up to him. I just went for it. He looked so hungry. I said, “Hey, if you’re really the Son of God, why don’t you just turn this rock into a loaf of bread. You can make a feast out of this place and enjoy yourself.” Then he quotes Deuteronomy to me, this mumbo jumbo about “man shall not live by bread alone.” I heard that one before. That’s one of those sayings Moses came up with. Okay, so he is so tired and so hungry he’s lost his appetite. But he and I know that there’s more than one kind of food. If he won’t go for the food for the belly, I’ve got more for him to think about.
So…I took his hand and in an instant we were up high, high enough to see all the kingdoms of the world. I have some magic of my own. I could tell he was impressed and taking it all in. I knew I was close. I said: “This is all mine. I control it. It can be yours. Every bit of it. All the nations, all the riches, all the power. All you have to do is worship me. Nothing else. Take a knee and it’s yours.”
Scripture again. Deuteronomy again! He looked at me and said that only the Lord should be worshipped. Only the Lord should be served. I have to confess, it threw me. I thought sure I had him with the power thing. If food didn’t work and fame wouldn’t turn him, then what would?
Then it hit me. This guy isn’t like the rest. He doesn’t have ambition like Solomon or lust like David or a little lack of courage like old Abraham. But what he does have is this overwhelming desire to be like God, to do his will, to convince others of his mission and sincerity. There’s always an angle. You just have to be patient and look for what buttons to push.
So once again I took his hand and the next instant we were in Jerusalem , standing on the pinnacle of the temple. I sensed this was his destiny. This was where it was going to come together, right here at the temple. He had something big planned, but I could stop him right here. I quoted Scripture to him. I figured he would like that. I told him to throw himself down, because God has already said that he would command his angels to protect you from harm. That was it. I knew he was going to show me that he was God’s son. He wouldn’t brag on himself, but he would show off God by letting God rescue him. Subtle, isn’t it. I get him to disobey God by making it look like it might just be God’s will. I will use his own faith to burn him.
Well, like I said, it’s going to be a challenge. He looked at me and for the third time, he quoted from the book of Deuteronomy. I’m getting really tired of hearing from that Old Testament wilderness experience. It’s like the failure of God’s people to listen then won’t be repeated by this Jesus. This time he said “You shall not put your Lord to the Test.”
I left. I’m not a very good loser, and he took three of my best shots and gave me nothing. I offered him food of every kind at his weakest point. He could have had food for his belly, food for his head, food for his heart and soul and he turned me down flat.
He’s good, this Son of God. He reminds me a lot of the Old Man. I will have to watch him carefully. There must be a way to get to him. In fact, I have to get to him. If he does what he says he came to do, my little game is up. Nobody can be this unselfish. Can they?
Yes. He could, and he did. Satan lost!
You know, Satan comes at us in every way. He knows us almost as well as God does. He certainly knows our weaknesses and he knows when to push our buttons. And if we don’t trust God in the same way that Jesus did, we will make the wrong decisions. That’s the downside. How easy it is to fall away unless we are kept safe by God’s grace.
But here in this story, Jesus shows us another way. He shows us what Paul called a more glorious way. Jesus came in love, lived to teach it and in love died to save us. In the process, he conquered not only death, but Satan as well.
Think back on those three temptations. Don’t try to satisfy your hunger or quench your thirst with the things of the earth. Worship the Lord. Serve Him. Don’t put Him to the test. Leave it to Him to test you. That’s our path. That’s the way out of our personal wilderness. That’s the way to life!