As humans, we all face temptations every day. This included our Lord Jesus Christ while on earth, for though He was fully God, He was also fully man. Satan delights when we give in to temptation and sin, and he would have loved to have seen Jesus give in to temptation, for then He would not have been sinless and able to redeem us. In our Scripture today we will look at one specific time in particular when Satan came against Jesus with several temptations. Let’s see how Jesus responded, and came out victorious.
As our Scripture opens, Jesus had just been baptized, and publicly identified as the beloved Son of God, and had been anointed by the Holy Spirit for His earthly ministry. He was then led by the Spirit into the wilderness. This was not by accident. Temptation, in itself, is not a sin. It is only when we fail and give in does the sin come. This would be a demonstration of Jesus’ perfect obedience to the Father.
Jesus was in the wilderness for forty days, and was fasting and praying during that time (vs. 2). By the end of that time He was naturally hungry, and Satan used that as an opportunity to attack. Satan will often strike when we are physically or emotionally depleted. He came to Jesus, tempting Him to change some of the stones into bread (vs. 3). This temptation was to use divine power independently of the Father’s will. Satan suggested a shortcut, to satisfy a legitimate need in an illegitimate way.
The Savior responded by coming against His adversary with Scripture (vs. 4). He didn’t use His own power or wit. Jesus confronted the devil with God’s Word, and only God’s Word. He quoted Deuteronomy 8:3. Obedience to God is more important than physical satisfaction.
Satan wasn’t going to give up, so he came at Jesus with another temptation (vs. 5-6). Since Jesus had used the Bible, Satan tried to also use it in this temptation (Psalm 91:11-12). He tempted Jesus to throw Himself from the Temple and command angels to catch Him. However, he misused Scripture, trying to force God’s hand, demanding miraculous proof. That is the sin of presumption, testing God rather than trusting Him. Jesus responded again with Scripture, quoting Deuteronomy 6:16. Scripture interprets Scripture. One verse never contradicts another.
Satan often uses half-truths instead of outright lies. He likes promoting just enough truth about God to appear Biblical, while denying the power of the Gospel to save and transform. We see this frequently done by false teachers and preachers. They like to twist Bible verses around and quoting it to suit their ungodly teachings, but never using the Scripture to teach salvation. Faith does not manipulate God or His Word, but rather submits to Him.
The devil tried a third time with a temptation of offering the kingdoms of the world to Jesus (vs. 8-9). Jesus will ultimately receive all the kingdoms of the earth, but Satan promised to give them to Him right then, without the cross, but only if He would worship him. Again, Jesus responded with Scripture, quoting Deuteronomy 6:13 and 10:20. This is the temptation of compromise: gain without suffering, glory without obedience. The devil flashes newer, bigger, and seemingly better things of this world in front of us, trying to lure us into thinking we must have it, which leads to the worship of the god of this world, who is Satan (II Corinthians 4:4). Worship belongs to God alone - no compromise, no negotiation. Christ’s authority is absolute. When Satan left, angels came to minister to Jesus (vs. 11). God’s provision comes in God’s time.
Why was Jesus tempted? By being tempted, He showed us that He was human, like us. And by overcoming temptation, Jesus showed His ability to carry out His Father’s will. Through His perfect obedience, Jesus will rescue us from the devil. Jesus’ rejection of the devil’s temptations also provides us the perfect model for enduring temptations, which is using God’s Word against the devil.
Satan hates the Bible, which is why he tries so hard to destroy it. He was repelled by the Word of God as he tempted Jesus. It is our sword against him (Ephesians 6:17). We can’t simply wave our Bible in the air, hoping to scare the devil away, and we can never defeat him in our own strength. If we try he will surely give us a beat down. To effectively defeat his lies, we need a good working knowledge of God’s Word, so that we can fight deception with truth, whatever the situation may be. Stand firmly upon God’s written Word, as our Lord did when the devil tempted Him to yield to his deception.