Sermon Tone Analysis
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Intro:
Tis the season of temptation
Think about it for just a second
You will inundated with sweets and foods you don’t eat any other time of the year
There is another temptation you might not recognize
We saw this with our kids on black friday
They were bugging me to take them out shopping
I told them I would take them as long as I could sit in the car and drink my coffee
As soon as I said yes they started plotting out their strategy for going to as many places as possible before dad ran out of coffee
We also noticed something strange
They weren’t just planning on buying gifts
They were focusing more on themselves than buying gifts for others
That’s one of the temptations of Christmas
There are so many deals you start buying for yourself
You justify it that it’s your Christmas gift
Pretty soon you’ve bought more for yourself than all the others combined
Temptations will come at you from every angle
They are subtle and its easy to justify doing them
Today, we are going to see Jesus face temptation
He needed to be tempted to show that he was fully man and to solidify he was king
No one can lead without being tested
Jesus faced temptation similar to what Adam and Eve did in the Garden but he passed
Read Matthew 4:1-4
Transition:
Since the Fall in the Garden of Eden, temptation has been a constant, unrelenting part of human life
No person has ever found a place or a circumstance that can make him safe from temptation.
In Matthew 4:1–11 one of the most monumental and mysterious spiritual battles of all time is recounted—the personal confrontation between Jesus Christ and Satan.
Here He reveals the victory secret, as it were, of His momentous struggle with Satan.
The encounter occurred immediately after Jesus’ baptism
His baptism in the Jordan declared His royalty; His testing in the wilderness demonstrated it.
Here Jesus proved He was worthy to receive and to reign over the kingdom His Father would give Him.
He shows that, even in the extreme of temptation, He consistently lived in perfect harmony with the divine plan.
We are given clear and applicable insights into Satan’s strategy against God and His people and also into Christ’s way of victory over the tempter
Matthew’s purpose was to demonstrate the pattern found in Jesus’ human victory over sin, a pattern that He longs to share with all who belong to Him
You can face temptation and be victorious
I. Led by the Spirit vs. 1-2
When facing temptation it is important to be led by the Spirit
As soon as Jesus comes out of the water of his baptism he goes into the wilderness
The Holy Spirit led him there
He will fast for 40 days and then face the tempter, who we know as the devil
If you are going to face temptation you will need to be led and empowered by the Spirit
All of history has shown that without it, man is weak
1 Corinthians 10:12
Therefore let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed lest he fall.
Into the Wilderness
He was led by the Spirit into the wilderness
The wilderness of Judea is a hot, barren, and desolate area that extends west from the Dead Sea almost to Jerusalem, and is some thirty-five miles long and fifteen miles wide
He will be in the wilderness 40 days which is an allusion to the 40 years Israel spent
To be Tempted
Jesus is led into the wilderness for the sole purpose to be tempted by the tempter, the Devil
One of Satan’s most common scriptural names is the devil, from diabolos, which means accuser or slanderer.
Among the many other names given him are: the ruler of this world (John 12:31; 14:30; 16:11), the prince of the power of the air (Eph.
2:2), the god of this world (2 Cor.
4:4), the serpent of old and the deceiver of the whole world (Rev.
12:9), Abaddon and Apollyon, both of which mean “destroyer” (Rev.
9:11), and the tempter
Many people, including some professing Christians, do not believe in a personal devil.
But Satan has never made himself more personally manifest than he did to Jesus in the wilderness.
Having been cast out of heaven by the Lord, Satan’s full fury has ever since been turned against God and His work
The devil’s single purpose is to frustrate the plan of God and to usurp the place of God.
He therefore continually attacks Christ and all who belong to Him.
He also pursues every effort to keep others from coming to Christ.
Fasted 40 days
Once Jesus goes into the wilderness he doesn’t eat for forty days and nights
Satan comes to him when he is at his weakest
He was hungry and without energy
While most people can’t relate to fasting 40 days you can relate to being tempted when hungry
Ever gone grocery shopping when you’re hungry?
You get home and your spouse asks you what you were thinking
You’re thinking in your mind “You should see all the wrappers of stuff I ate on the way home.”
The point here is that temptation often comes when we are at our weakest
And that means more than just being low
Temptation often trips people up after one of their highest moments
Let’s look at the three temptations Jesus faces
Each designed to weaken and destroy the Messiah in an important area of His mission.
The temptations became progressively worse.
II.
1st Temptation: Indulge Yourself vs. 3-4
Temptations will target your selfishness
His first word to Jesus was, If you are the Son of God
Satan was hoping to persuade Jesus to demonstrate His power to verify that it was real.
That would mean violating God’s plan that He set that power aside in humiliation and use it only when the Father willed.
Satan wanted Jesus to disobey God
Attacks at Weakest Point
The first temptation is a direct hit against his hunger
This was a temptation to use God’s gifts for selfish purposes.
Satan suggested that Jesus use His miraculous powers to provide food for Himself.
Jesus wasn’t in control while on earth
He was at the complete mercy of the Lord
He was also able to sympathize with our weaknesses
Hebrews 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.
Turn Stones into Bread
We might say that Jesus was being tested through His strengths, through His gifts.
Would He allow His strengths to become traps?
Jesus’ Defense: Live by the Word
Jesus quotes Deut 8:3 in response to the Devil’s temptation
Deuteronomy 8:3
And he humbled you and let you hunger and fed you with manna, which you did not know, nor did your fathers know, that he might make you know that man does not live by bread alone, but man lives by every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord.
When Jesus quoted Deuteronomy 8:3, Jesus shows that every word that proceeds from the mouth of God should be more precious to us than food itself.
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