The Son who gets it right

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Sermon for Lent 1 – Invocavit

2 Corinthians 6:1-10  +  Matthew 4:1-11

This is My beloved Son, with whom I am well-pleased. God the Father’s words spoken straight from heaven at Jesus’ baptism were still ringing in the air as the Father’s Holy Spirit led Jesus from the Jordan River out into the desert, where He fasted for forty days and forty nights. You know who else is called a “son of God” in the Bible? Adam, for one. In Luke’s genealogy of Jesus’ ancestry, Adam is called the “son of God.” And he was, in one sense: by direct act of creation. You know who else is called a “son of God” in the Bible? The people of Israel. God says of Israel in the book of Hosea, When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called My son. Israel was God’s “son” by God’s act of creating them and nurturing them as a nation—as His chosen people. Adam and Eve were tempted by the devil, and they fell into sin. Israel was tempted by the devil, too (though less directly than Adam and Eve were), especially during the time they spend wandering around in the desert on their extended journey from Egypt to the Promised Land. And Israel fell into sin over and over out there in the wilderness. About Adam, about Israel, the heavenly Father could not say, “With this son of mine I am well-pleased.” But about Jesus He could and did say it.

But that doesn’t mean that Jesus got to live a life of luxury and comfort and ease. He didn’t come into the world to enjoy the blessed, glorious reward that a well-pleasing Son of God deserves. He came into the world to step into our place as our Substitute: to be tempted as we are tempted, to suffer as we suffer, and to die as we die, so that His victory over sin and temptation might be counted to us as our victory, so that His suffering and death might be counted as our suffering and death and open the way for us sinners to become sons of God. But that only happens if this Son of God—who is God’s Son by birth in eternity, by miraculous conception in the Virgin Mary, and by choice as His chosen Servant, as Israel was supposed to be—it only happens if this Son of God gets it right, where Adam and Israel, the previous sons of God, and we, the wayward sons of Adam, have gotten it so, so wrong.

And so we find the Son of God, not living it up in a palace, but fasting alone in the desert for “forty days and forty nights.” It isn’t a mere coincidence that the very same phrase is used for Moses at Mount Sinai, who went without eating and without drinking for forty days and forty nights, shortly after leading the people of Israel through the Red Sea, where St. Paul writes that the Israelites were “baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the Sea.” You see the connections God is making, between His son Israel passing through the Red Sea in a sort of “baptism,” and then taking Moses, the leader of Israel, up onto the mountain where he fasted for forty days and forty nights? Connections, so that we understand what Jesus has come to do: to take Israel’s place and get it right where Israel got it wrong.

We see more connections in each of the three individual temptations, which are all, really, just variations on a theme: “God is not good. He doesn’t deserve your obedience. You deserve to be happy.”

First, at the end of the forty days of fasting, Jesus is hungry. So the devil comes and tries to take advantage of Jesus, tries to get him to turn away from God, just as he tried (and succeeded at) getting Adam and Eve to turn away from God in the Garden of Eden, just as he tried (and succeeded at) getting Israel to turn away from God in the wilderness—just as he has succeeded so many times with us.

What was the gist of the devil’s temptation of Adam and Eve? (He only spoke to Eve, of course, but I think this is an accurate summary of his temptation.) “You’re God’s children, right? Why would a good Father put this beautiful tree right here in the middle of this garden and deprive His children of its fruit? You don’t have to listen to Him. You have the right to be happy. Take the fruit!” What was his temptation of Israel? “If you are sons of God, and He’s such a good and loving Father, why would He lead you out into the wilderness to die of starvation and thirst? He’s let you get a little bit thirsty? You deserve better than that! But it doesn’t look like God is providing it, does it? What, He’s given you bread from heaven now, but told you not to gather it up on the Sabbath Day? You go ahead and gather it up. Don’t you worry about God’s commandment. You’re sons of God. You have every right to do what you need to do to be happy.”

That’s basically the gist of the temptation the devil put to Jesus, too. If you are the Son of God, command that these stones become bread!” But he answered, “It is written, ‘Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.’” If only Adam and Eve had replied to the devil like that! If only the people of Israel had trusted in the word of the God who had just rescued them from slavery in Egypt! But instead Adam and Eve looked at all the bounty of the Garden around them and said, “No, it’s not enough. God isn’t good. We’re going to do things our way.” And Israel looked at the great deliverance God had just accomplished for them and said, “What a terrible God! He’s led us out into the wilderness to kill us.” But Jesus is the Son who gets it right. “So what if I’m hungry? So what if My Father has kept Me here in the desert for six weeks? I live by His Word and I serve at His command. I will not serve Myself. I will not depart from His word to do things My own way, for any reason.”

There was another angle to the devil’s temptation of Adam and Eve. “God has just recently created you. You’re the crown of His creation. You’re His son, Adam. Do you really think He would let you die just because you took a bite of fruit? You will not surely die. Try it! Test Him and see!” The devil used the same angle with Israel, even though he didn’t speak to them audibly in the form of a serpent. “God has brought you out of Egypt and has promised to lead you to the promised land. So clearly He will put up with it if you speak your mind to Him. You don’t see any water at the moment? You’d better let God hear about how unfair that is! Go ahead! Order Moses to give you what you want! God will understand. Test Him and see!”

That’s basically the gist of the temptation the devil put to Jesus. If you are the Son of God, cast yourself down! For it is written, ‘He will put his angels in charge of you,’ and, ‘In their hands they will lift you up, lest you dash your foot against a stone.’” Jesus said to him, “It is written again, ‘You shall not test the Lord your God.’” If only Adam and Eve had replied to the devil like that! If only the people of Israel had trusted in the word of the God who had just rescued them from slavery in Egypt! But they grew impatient with God. They thought they had the right to make Him prove His goodness, to make Him fulfill His promises on their timetable, in their way. They thought they could get away with testing God. They were wrong. But Jesus is the Son of God who gets it right. “I don’t need to test the word and promises of God. I don’t need to see His deliverance. I trust in His plan. I trust in His will. And you, devil, will never shake me from that trust!”

There was yet a third angle to the devil’s temptation to Adam and Eve, related to the others. “What do you want? Knowledge? Pleasure? Power? Godhood? You can have it all if you just ignore God and listen to me!” His temptation to Israel was similar. “If you want to make it safely through this wilderness, if you want to be provided for, if you want victory over your enemies, and prosperity, and safety, and comfort, what you really need is a god to go with you, a god whom you can see, a god who doesn’t make demands of you. So make that golden calf and bow down to it! It’s much less terrifying and demanding than that judgmental, invisible God who thundered down His Ten Commandments to you!”

And likewise, the devil held up to Jesus the world for a prize. He showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. And he said to Him, All these things I will give you, if you will fall down and worship me.” Then Jesus said to him, “Get away from me, Satan! For it is written, ‘You shall worship the Lord your God, and him only shall you serve.’” If only Adam and Eve had given the devil such a reply! If only Israel, had said such a thing!

If only you and I had replied like that to the devil every time he came around with his temptations. And whether it’s the devil himself, or the unbelieving world, or our own sinful flesh doing the tempting, it doesn’t matter much in the end. They’re all on the same side. There are different angles of temptation, different twists. But in the end, they all come back to the First Commandment: You shall have no other gods. But every time we dare to disagree with God’s handling of the world, or with something He says in His word, every time we covet something God hasn’t given us or stew in anger at Him over something He has given us, every time we fail to trust Him and His goodness and love, every time we ignore God’s word and take matters into our own hands, doing what we want to do because we think we have some divine right to be “happy.” It’s that attitude, and the sinful actions that flow from it, that plunged our race into sin and death and into the devil’s kingdom in the first place. It’s that attitude, and the actions that flow from it, for which you all, we all, need to repent.

Then look at the beloved Son of God, how He responds to the devil’s temptations. He suffers as He’s tempted, but He doesn’t budge from His devotion to His Father’s word, from obeying His Father, from trusting in His Father, from His willingness to suffer anything, even death, rather than disobey or displease His Father in heaven. He was the Son of God who got it right.

And He got it right for you, so that He might qualify as the sinless Savior and Substitute that you needed, so that, by being the perfect Son of God—and Son of Man!—He might one day offer His life on the cross in your place, giving His perfect life up to His Father in heaven as the price of your admission into God’s family.

Yes, Jesus, the true Son of God, was the Son who got it right. And He shares His sonship with all who repent and believe in Him. As Paul writes to the Galatians, For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus. For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ. And as Paul writes to the Colossians, God the Father has delivered us from the power of darkness and conveyed us into the kingdom of the Son of His love, in whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins.

Cling to Christ Jesus, the sinless Son of God, and the Seed of the woman, whom the Father sent to crush the serpent’s head. And then, as sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus, learn from Him to trust in God at all times, to take up the shield of faith with which you will be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked one. Learn from Him to rely on God’s goodness and grace, even if He tests you in the wilderness for a time. Learn from Him to use the word of God as a mighty weapon against all the devil’s temptations. And, through faith in Christ Jesus, you will one day hear with your own ears the same words that Jesus heard from His Father: This is My beloved Son, with whom I am well-pleased. Amen.

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