Jesus Encounters the Enemy
Sermon for the First Sunday in Lent
On this first Sunday in Lent, Jesus encounters our great enemy, the devil, whose malice led to the fall of mankind into sin and death, from which Jesus came to redeem us.
Does the devil know exactly who he is dealing with? Maybe, maybe not. He has, of course, been watching Jesus, as some of the church fathers point out. He was aware of Jesus’s miraculous birth, the adoration of the Magi, and his recent baptism at which God’s voice was heard declaring Jesus his beloved Son. Yet here now was this man, lying weak in the wilderness after 40 days of fasting. Moses had fasted 40 days, as had Elijah, and they were but men. Maybe Jesus, too, would now be susceptible to the devil’s suggestions. And so, the devil begins, “If you are the Son of God...”
Had not God just spoken, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased?”
This opening echoes how the serpent introduced himself to Eve, in Genesis ch. 3. “Did God say?”
The devil did not immediately tempt Eve to disobey. First he asked a seemingly neutral question, which the woman answered, apparently truthfully. But responding to the question was Eve’s first mistake. Only then did the devil contradict God’s word: “You shall not surely die”—and offer an alternative explanation, a notion that God’s commandment was less to protect Adam and Eve and more to subordinate them. He entices the woman with the prospect of becoming “like God” through the knowledge of good and evil. The forbidden fruit comes to seem attractive for its qualities and its supposed potential.
Adam and Eve were tempted only once, and fell. Christ was tempted three times, and endured. Yet the temptation in the garden and the temptation of Christ have much in common, and both reveal the essential characteristics of temptation in general, which we all face.
The fruit is presented as being “good for food,” “a delight to the eyes,” and “to be desired to make one wise.” It’s three different temptations in one.
“Good for food” refers to the animal appetites. We need food and other things to live. But God had provided all the other trees in the garden from which Adam and Eve might eat. They were not starving or even fasting.
Christ encountered this temptation in quite another condition, at the end of his 40-day fast. He was in a barren wilderness, not a garden, with neither the bounty of the earth nor the resources of civilization to meet his needs.
So the devil offered his first suggestion. “If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become loaves of bread.”
Jesus responds only: “It is written: Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.” A quotation from scripture.
Jesus dismisses the temptation, but for our sake he also answers the question behind the temptation, “If you are the Son of God.” Jesus is himself the Word, the Divine Wisdom that proceeds from the Father. So this is a word not for the devil but for us. Jesus is the source of man’s life; he is the bread from heaven that feeds us, just as the Israelites ate the manna in the wilderness. Just as they sometimes grumbled about the plainness and monotony of their diet, we may be tempted to grow impatient with the ordinary means of grace, the word and sacraments, which Jesus has given his church to be the means of our spiritual life. We may be tempted to look for more spectacular fare. This brings us to the second temptation.
In the garden, the forbidden fruit was not only good for food, it was attractive, something spectacular. It appeals to a higher faculty than that of the animal appetites. Human beings appreciate and desire beauty in a way that the beasts do not. Here the temptation may be to doubt God’s generosity. Has he withheld something good and special from them?
Christ’s second temptation is to prove himself once again to be the Son of God, this time by engineering a spectacular deliverance in the vein of Psalm 91: The angels “will bear you up in their hands, lest you dash your foot against a stone.” But again Jesus dismisses the temptation, saying only, “you shall not tempt the Lord your God.” This again is a double-edged word. Jesus refuses to put God to the test, as the devil suggests. But because he is himself the Lord God, this is also a warning for the tempter.
For us, this second temptation shows us that the victorious spiritual life is not found in moments of glory, and supernatural events. It is in the patient endurance of all things, which Christ demonstrates in the face of temptation not rising to Satan’s bait. This is a preview of the cross. There, precisely through ultimate patience under unimaginable suffering, the seed of the woman will crush the serpent’s head. This, again, Jesus offers for our encouragement.
In the wilderness, one temptation remains. The devil offers Christ his domain, all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. “All these will I give you, if you will fall down and worship me.”
Idolatry is putting anything in the world ahead of God in our affections. The serpent enticed Adam and Eve with self-regard: “You shall be as gods.” The devil offers Jesus the closest thing he has to godlikeness, a poor substitute, really: power. But Jesus once again dismisses him. “Begone, Satan! For it is written, ‘You shall worship the Lord your God, and him only shall you serve.’”
Power is a potent idol of the human heart, now more than ever. From the desire to exert control over those around us, to political ideologies that enslave millions, the allure of power is strong. Idolatry itself is often about the attempt to tap into a source of power.
Here once again in Jesus’s rejection of this final temptation there is hope for us. Rather than practice idolatry, or any other form of sin, we can look to him. He is the one who truly deserves our worship, who set aside his glory for a time, and came down to us, and lived as one of us, even tempted in all the ways that we are, so that he might raise us up with him, victorious, righteous, and free.


