"The Temptation of Jesus"_Matthew 3b-4a_Jul 18 2021

God With Us  •  Sermon  •  Submitted
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Our relationship with Jesus determines our ability to withstand temptation

Notes
Transcript

Introduction

Welcome…
Series: God With Us
Bibles: Matthew 4
Scripture reading -

4 Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. 2 And after fasting forty days and forty nights, he was hungry. 3 And the tempter came and said to him, “If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become loaves of bread.” 4 But he answered, “It is written,

“ ‘Man shall not live by bread alone,

but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.’ ”

5 Then the devil took him to the holy city and set him on the pinnacle of the temple 6 and said to him, “If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down, for it is written,

“ ‘He will command his angels concerning you,’

and

“ ‘On their hands they will bear you up,

lest you strike your foot against a stone.’ ”

7 Jesus said to him, “Again it is written, ‘You shall not put the Lord your God to the test.’ ” 8 Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. 9 And he said to him, “All these I will give you, if you will fall down and worship me.” 10 Then Jesus said to him, “Be gone, Satan! For it is written,

“ ‘You shall worship the Lord your God

and him only shall you serve.’ ”

11 Then the devil left him, and behold, angels came and were ministering to him.

(Pray…)
So far - we’ve seen in Matthew, events surrounding Jesus, the Son of God who came to Earth
We looked at the genealogy of Jesus, which verified the reality that Jesus is real
We’ve read major regional events surrounding the birth of Christ - notice all the times God intervened during these events with his angels and through dreams
We read about the angel who came to Joseph and told him to not fear, the Holy Spirit will conceive, and that he should call his name Jesus, “for he will save his people from their sins.” [1:21]
The Wise Men came to seek Jesus
King Herod became jealous and tried to conspire with the Wise Men to find out where he was
But the Wise Men visited with young Jesus and worshipped him with gifts - and they avoided going back to Herod after being warned in a dream from the Lord
And then an angel of the Lord came to Joseph in a dream to warn him to take his family to Egypt for protection because of Herod
Herod realizes he was tricked by the wise men, puts out an order to kill all male children under the age of two - and even this was a fulfillment of prophecy
After Herod died - an angel of the Lord again appeared to Joseph - take his family back to Israel
But Joseph then learned that the son of Herod was now in control - and again, he was warned in a dream - so he moved his family to Galilee - to Nazareth
Pause for a moment: Do you see what an important part Joseph had in the life of Jesus, especially when he was young?
We tend to focus on Mary, but Joseph had a huge role in the life of Jesus
In Chapter 3: John the Baptist comes
All this time, Matthew is leading up to the beginning of Jesus’ ministry
Two main events before Jesus begins his earthly ministry:
The baptism of Jesus
The temptation of Jesus
And so the end of Chapter 3, Jesus was baptized
This is the first dialog in Matthew from Jesus himself
Matt 3:14 -

14 John would have prevented him, saying, “I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?” 15 But Jesus answered him, “Let it be so now, for thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.”

John’s message to the people was for them to repent and to be baptized
But Jesus himself told John to baptize him
By doing this, Jesus connects himself with those of us who are repentant - not that he needed to repent, but to show himself as an example that we need to align ourselves with God’s righteousness
This is also a clear picture of the triune nature of God:
Jesus, the Son of God, coming up from the water
The Spirit of God coming down from Heaven to rest on the Son
And the voice of the Father, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.”
All three Synoptic gospels relate the event of the baptism of Jesus and also the temptation of Jesus
Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness in order to be tempted by the devil
The temptation came at the end - after he had fasted for forty days
The text does not really say anything what Jesus did those forty days - other than, he fasted
I think he was in close communion with the Father - I think he prayed constantly as he prepared himself for his great ministry
There are two comforting verses we get from the temptation of Jesus - both from Hebrews
Heb 2:18 For because he himself has suffered when tempted, he is able to help those who are being tempted.
Heb 4:15 For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin.
I’d like to point out a parallel here: between God’s chosen children, Israel - and God’s only begotten Son, who was beginning his ministry
Israel was delivered out of Egypt
Jesus was taken to Egypt to avoid Herod until his death
Matt 2:15 This was to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the prophet, “Out of Egypt I called my son.”
Jesus entered the wilderness for forty days and was tempted, but never failed
Israel wandered in the wilderness for forty years and failed constantly when tempted
The other thing I notice as I read this text is that there is an implicit emphasis on the humanity of Jesus
Satan didn’t tempt Jesus in Heaven - he waited until he came to Earth so he could tempt his flesh
Jesus was fully God and fully man
In his humanity, he had needs - verse 2 makes an obvious assessment after he fasted forty days & nights: “he was hungry”
That’s a human need, being hungry
That’s something we can understand - we all have needs
Notice that the devil didn’t tempt Jesus with something about the structure of his ministry
He didn’t say, “If you’re the Son of God, you only need six disciples,” or, “If you’re the Son of God, you should begin your ministry in Judea, not Galilee.”
No - the devil went right to Jesus’ stomach
The devil likes to go to our weakness
I don’t want to skip over the fact of what Jesus was doing for forty days & nights - even though the Bible does not spell-out what he was doing
For one minute, I don’t think he was sitting around, doing nothing - playing solitaire
I know my Lord, and I know that as a man, Jesus had a deep relationship with the Father and the Holy Spirit
We just saw an intense picture of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit during his baptism - and I think there was an intense intimacy in that moment
I think the responses Jesus gave the devil for these three temptations were not just clever little answers -
You know, like a script
“When the devil says this, then quote this verse”
I think the responses of Jesus came deeply from his heart, out of a close relationship he had with his Father
When Jesus said, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God,” I think that was heartfelt
Jesus quoted Scripture because Scripture had ministered to him
Jesus didn’t need to turn stones into bread because he knew the Father would supply his needs
The devil was suggesting that God was there to serve him - but Jesus knew he was there to serve the Father
I think during the forty days of not eating , I imagine Jesus must have said that verse from Deuteronomy to himself over and over
That verse must have ministered to him while he struggled with his hunger
The devil tempted Jesus with the very thing he was dealing with - and it was the very thing the Father and the Spirit was ministering to him about
When Jesus quoted that verse, it wasn’t as a cute, clever comeback - Jesus quoted what was deeply special to him
All of us need to be in a close, meaningful relationship with the Lord
We all need to allow the Word of God to deeply minister to us - so that when the temptations come, we have something more meaningful to lean on
Look at the difference
Eating bread has meaning to it, but “every word that comes from the mouth of God” has much greater meaning
Do you see what I’m saying?
Every temptation has some truth to it -
You will feel pleasure
You will be relieved
You will have more money
Those are all meaningful, in the right context
But there’s something more meaningful - our relationship with the Lord, through our obedience to him, and to our connection we have with his Word
There is nothing more meaningful than that
There is a deceitfulness to every temptation because there is an element of something wonderful in just about every temptation
Eating bread is wonderful, in its proper context - we need to eat in order to nourish our bodies
And there’s nothing better than fresh, hot bread
Jesus would have nourished his body right then, but he would have lost to the devil!
Do you see how insidious sin is?
The temptation promises something wonderful - because there is something wonderful about it - but that’s only a half-truth
Sin is insidious because it gives us something wonderful, but it takes us away from a close communion with the Lord - it brings consequences - and it brings destruction
Sin seeks to destroy our relationship with the Lord
It cheats us and lies to us
It steals our joy
It hurts our relationships - and hurts our ministry for the Lord
It brings on consequences
It destroys our confidence in the Lord
And it gets in the way of our walk with the Lord
Here’s a definition of sin:
Not loving, and not trusting God
But temptation never highlights anything bad about our sin - only what seems wonderful at the time
You ask: How can there be anything wonderful about lying, stealing, cheating, and even murdering?
All of those types of sin seek to solve your problems
Nothing wrong with problem solving - but the result of these things is awful
Temptation lies to you and only highlights the good things might result -
“Just lie and you won’t hurt anyone’s feelings” - “Lying will get you out of this sticky situation”
“Just go ahead and steal because you could really use that thing”
“Go ahead and have coffee with her - she’s having problems with her husband - maybe she can help you with your wife”
Temptation is deceitful - and sin is insidious
Do you see how important it is that we need to be plugged into God’s Word everyday?
And to allow the Lord to develop that relationship with you?

Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me. 5 I am the vine; you are the branches.

That’s from John 15 - Jesus is talking about having a close, intimate relationship with him
Rather than me trying to draw all sorts of parallels to each of the three temptations - and really analyze each response Jesus gives - I’d rather we examine the motivation of Jesus
I want to look at this passage maybe in a different way you’ve thought of
What was he going through during this time of fasting?
What was his prayer life like during those forty days?
How was he preparing himself for ministry?
Jesus used Scripture in his responses to the devil because the Scriptures gave him comfort - but Scripture can only give us comfort if we allow a close relationship to develop between us and the Lord
Our relationship with Jesus controls how meaningful Scripture is
If you read the Bible and get nothing from it, you haven’t allowed the Lord to develop that relationship
I don’t see Jesus quoting Scripture as some sort of a system of apologetics
These verses poured out of the abundance of his heart because of the close walk he had with the Father - and because of the Spirit’s anointing on his life
Nothing like this can pour out of our hearts unless we have a close walk with the Lord
Imagine the constant prayer Jesus had during that forty days
Jesus responded with Scripture at each temptation, because he was so plugged into it - and because he walked so closely with the Father
I’ve heard this passage preached many times before - and many times the summary is this:
Jesus quoted Scripture each time the devil tempted him - therefore you should quote Scripture when you’re tempted
As if, the Scripture itself is some talisman - some magical spell
If you quote Scripture because you have to, that’s religion
A relationship with Jesus says, “Let me show you how meaningful Scripture is - and how much you desperately need it”
Sometimes it’s asked:
What if Jesus had sinned?
Was there any chance that he could have?
Because Jesus had a perfect relationship with the Father, it was impossible for him to sin
If we had the same relationship with Jesus as Jesus has with the Father - it would be impossible for us to sin, too
That’s why there will be no sin in Heaven
1 Cor 13:12Now we see things imperfectly, like puzzling reflections in a mirror, but then we will see everything with perfect clarity. All that I know now is partial and incomplete, but then I will know everything completely, just as God now knows me completely.” (NLT)
It wasn’t just those verses he quoted - it was Jesus giving such a deep, meaningful response from the heart, which was based on his sweet relationship with the Father and the Spirit who had led him to this point - it was impossible for him to fail
I know the text doesn’t say what he did those forty days - but I know my Lord - I don’t think he spent most of time studying flora & fauna
I don’t think this was just an interesting field trip for him
“Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.’ ”
Jesus said that because he felt it - he knew it - it was his life to live by every word from his Father
Notice, twice, in the first two temptations, the devil said, “IF you are the Son of God”
And the second time, the devil adjusted his tactic and tried to quote Scripture himself
But Jesus could instantly see it was so blatantly taken out of context
His response was almost, “How dare you - Again it is written, ‘You shall not put the Lord your God to the test.’ ”
Jesus made it clear - you don’t know the Father, but I do - I know he loves me because I walk closely with him
And then the devil, in an act of desperation, takes him to a high mountain, shows him the kingdoms of the world and says, “I’ll give it all to you - just fall down and worship me.”
And listen to how Jesus responded - it came from a heart of devotion with the Lord:

Be gone, Satan! For it is written,

“ ‘You shall worship the Lord your God

and him only shall you serve.’ ”

Do you see how this reveals his close walk with the Father? The devil’s proposition was so unthinkable because this verse he quoted meant so much to him.
I think, during those forty days, the Father was preparing Jesus for the rest of his days on Earth
I think Jesus realized what was about to happen in his life - he’s 30 years old - he’s about to begin the most important ministry of his life
He’s about to change the whole world - soon he will pick his twelve -
he’ll preach and teach
he’ll heal others
and perform miracles
he’ll confront the Pharisees
he’ll love others and be hated
he’ll pour into his disciples and be misunderstood
he’ll be betrayed by one of the twelve
and his ministry will end with a trial, torture, mockery, death on a cross, and a Resurrection
I think all of this was on his mind, and he drew closer to the Father and relied on Scripture during those forty days
I’m convinced that our best defense against temptation is to walk closely with the Lord and keep his Word close to our hearts
I don’t believe quoting verses like a religious mantra does anything
I think Jesus is coming soon - and we can’t mess around anymore
If you don’t know the Lord - repent, call out to him, and draw close to him
If you’re a Christian, stop fooling around -
draw close to the Lord, obey him, and put his Word into your heart as you read the Bible everyday
My goal is never to manage your sin
My goal is not even to see to it you sin less
My encouragement is for you to walk closer and closer to Jesus
That your daily prayer life,
And your daily Bible reading brings you closer to him
So that your obedience to him pours out of an abundance of your heart
And he helps you lose interest in anything which could interfere in your relationship with him
(Pray…)
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