Reasons to hate Jesus: He resisted temptation.
Mark 1:12–15 12The Spirit immediately sent Jesus out into the wilderness. 13He was in the wilderness for forty days, being tempted by Satan. He was with the wild animals, and angels were serving him. 14After John was put in prison, Jesus went to Galilee, preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God. 15“The time is fulfilled,” he said. “The kingdom of God has come near! Repent, and believe in the gospel.”
“If God is for us,
who can be against us?” (Romans 8:31) Amen.
You may have
noticed that we received a little bit of snow this week. It probably took you a
while to shovel 17 inches of snow out of your driveway and sidewalk. Or maybe
you had a really nice neighbor who helped you with his snowblower. If he helps
you, I’m guessing you’re going to be appreciative.
Not so with a
reporter named Virginia. She wrote an op-ed for a major newspaper on how upset
she was with her neighbor for snowblowing her driveway. Because Virginia and
her neighbor support different political candidates, she wrote that she cannot
accept her neighbor’s act of kindness. “So here’s my response to my plowed
driveway, for now. Politely, but not profusely, I’ll acknowledge the Sassian
move with a wave of thanks, a minimal start on building back trust. I’m not
ready to knock on the door with a covered dish yet. … I also can’t give my
neighbors absolution; it’s not mine to give. Free driveway work, as nice as it
is, is just not the same currency as justice and truth.”
Imagine thinking
this way.
This person is so
filled with hate that she is unwilling to accept a neighborly gesture of
friendship. I’m guessing that her neighbor didn’t even think twice about it. After
all, if you give a guy enough time and gas, he will snowblow the entire block.
Maybe when saw our
theme for our Lenten series on “Reasons to Hate Jesus” you thought your pastor
had lost it. How could we ever hate Jesus?! Sure, we accept that Scripture says
that the Jewish religious leaders hated Jesus. But do we also accept that our
sinful nature hates Jesus, too?
As the divine Son
of God and Mary’s human Son, Jesus naturally does good works. We should love
and praise him for these works. However, we end up resenting him, despising
him, even hating him.
That makes as much
sense as hating your neighbor for snowblowing your driveway. This Lenten season
we’ll examine six reasons why we hate Jesus. The first reason is because Jesus
resisted temptation.
“The Spirit
immediately sent Jesus out into the wilderness.” This is right after Jesus’
baptism. While Jesus was still dripping wet from the Jordan River, the Holy
Spirit sent the King of kings to do battle with the Prince of this world. It
was the Serpent-Crusher vs. the Ancient Serpent. It was the Light of the world
vs. the Prince of darkness.
It was God’s will
that Jesus face Satan alone. He went out to the desert where there were no
distractions. There is no work to be done – except the work of redeeming the
world. Jesus goes with out eating for forty days. Jesus merely “exists” there.
That’s part of
what makes the temptations so hard. There’s nowhere to flee to. There’s nothing
else to do. What do you do when there’s nothing to do? You pull out your phone.
Scroll. Swipe. Play. Jesus prayed and meditated upon God’s Word. He relied on
that Word to protect him from the old evil foe. He used the Sword of the Spirit,
which is the Word of God, to ward off the head demon’s attack.
“He was in the
wilderness for forty days, being tempted by Satan. He was with the wild
animals, and angels were serving him.” That’s all Mark has to say about it.
Mark’s Gospel is one of action. He says that Jesus was tempted over forty days
in the desert. He stood up to Satan. And he won. This wasn’t a battle over a golden
fiddle. It was a battle for souls. Satan had been prepping and training for
this desert duel for over six millennia. He had his game plan worked out. Jesus
was ragged. Exhausted. Famished. Jesus was at his least and he still won.
Marks says that the
angels ministered to Jesus, who was their Lord and Creator. Now we pray in Luther’s
Morning and Evening Prayers for God to send his holy angel to be with us that
the wicked foe may have no power over us.
Jesus resisted
temptation. Of course, Jesus resisted temptation! He’s perfect! It’s no
contest!
That’s like if you
tried playing HORSE against Larry Bird or Steph Curry. It wouldn’t be much of a
contest. You could try your best and you’d never measure up. Then you begin to
resent Bird and Curry. You don’t want to step onto the court again. You don’t
want to be embarrassed again. You would rather just give up and take the loss.
That’s often the
way we feel with temptations. Pick a temptation. Alcohol. Hoarding. Coveting.
Anger. Revenge. Lying. Discontent. Lust. Gossiping. Laziness. Overeating. You
struggle with these temptations. You try so hard to overcome them. You pray about
them. Resist them. Run away from them. But you still end up losing to them. Very
soon, you don’t even try. You just give up and take the loss.
Then along comes
Jesus. … And he just wins. He defeats everything that ever defeated you. He deftly
and divinely avoided everything the devil threw at him.
Doesn’t that just
get under your skin?
Then Jesus makes
it worse. After he left the desert he began preaching the same message you
heard me say to you when you came forward to place your ashes on the Ash
Wednesday banner, “Repent and believe in the gospel.”
Have you ever had
a friend like that? They can so easily do whatever it is you can’t. Draw a
picture. Program the computer. Play a game. They tell you, “Oh, it’s simple.
Just do it different.”
Do you enjoy
people like that?
The reason our
sinful nature hates Jesus is because we look at him as a mere example. We wrongly
think that because Jesus used God’s Word and prayed for God’s will, we should
be able to exactly the same. If Jesus stood up to the devil, we should be able
to do that, too. If Jesus resisted temptations, then we should, too.
But that’s not why
Jesus was sent into the desert. He didn’t resist temptation to be our example.
He didn’t go out there to show us what to do. Jesus resisted temptation to be
our Substitute. He went out there to show us what he did.
Jesus isn’t some
snot-nosed punk rubbing our noses in something we can’t do but he can. The
writer to the Hebrews summarizes the meaning of Jesus’ temptations. “For we do
not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one
who has been tempted in every way, just as we are, yet was without sin”
(Hebrews 4:15).
Jesus is facing
what we face. He was hurting with us and for us.
While we were still dripping wet from our
own baptism, the Holy Spirit cast us out to go against the old evil foe, who
now means deadly woe. We have been sent to war.
Trials, temptations, and testing will come
your way. You can expect them. You are baptized, after all. Look at all the
trouble Jesus’ baptism caused him. At your baptism, you were ripped out of the
claws of Satan and placed into the hands of the heavenly Father. The mark of
the beast was washed off your forehead and replaced with the name of the Father
(Revelation 13:16; 14:1). The cross has been placed on you from your head to
your heart, marking you as a redeemed child of God. The devil hates all this!
So does the unbelieving world! Together, the devil and his minions will come at
you with everything they have.
Remember, a servant is not greater than
his master (John 15:20). The devil tempted Jesus in the desert. The demons poured
into people to torment the Son of God. Close friends from Nazareth tried to
throw their childhood friend off a cliff. If that happened to the Savior, it is
going to happen to you, too! Expect it. Meet it head-on.
The life of a baptized believer is not
easy. Christians are not granted any kind of special immunities from disease;
no exemptions from suffering; no special passes that allow us to go around the
wilderness. You can’t go around it. You can only go through it. We are living
in it.
Here’s the difference, though. Jesus was
driven into the wilderness to do battle alone. We are driven into the
wilderness, but Jesus is already there. He battles the devil and our
temptations with us and for us, because he’s already won the war. Not as our
example. But as our Substitute.
How did Jesus win the war? “They conquered
[the dragon] because of the blood of the lamb and the word of their testimony”
(Revelation 12:11). The blood of the Lamb conquered the dragon. The word of the
Christ defeated the lies of Satan. The power of the Son of God was no match for
a mere angel, no matter how demonic he may be.
For all the times we have been attracted
by the devil’s lies, Jesus didn’t let the devil’s lies attract him or his
threats distract him. Jesus fought the good fight. He is the Valiant One, whom
God Himself elected.
For all the times we have become apathetic
in this spiritual war, Jesus marched solemnly forward. The bruised descendant
of Eve crushed the Ancient Serpent’s head as he stepped ever closer to
Golgotha’s hill.
For all the times we have welcomed sin
into our lives and given in to temptation, Jesus resolutely went to the cross.
There, upon that old rugged cross, he paid for your sins. He bled for your
temptations. He felt God’s wrath for your weaknesses.
Now, distanced from the desert, come down
from the cross, and gone from the grave, Jesus grants you the victory over
Satan. One little word can fell him. Satan can no longer condemn you. Christ
Jesus has condemned Satan (Romans 8:33,34). The accuser now stands
accused.
St. Paul assures us that we are not alone
in this wilderness battle. “If God is for us, who can be against us?” (Romans
8:28)?
Yet, we hate Jesus
because he resisted temptations and our sinful nature wants to give in to
temptations. Our sanctified spirit listens to Jesus and wants to repent for our
failures in resistance. But our sinful nature hates that, too. We hate
admitting we’re weak; we’re incapable; we’re wrong.
But our sinful
nature is the one that’s wrong. Why would we hate someone who rescued us? Why
would we hate someone who went out of his way to help us? Why would we hate someone
who had the time and energy, the compassion and love to resist temptations as
our Substitute? Only because we think we can do it for ourselves.
Jesus came to rescue
those who didn’t fight temptation. He was perfect for those who are imperfect.
He went to the cross for those who hated him. That includes us.
So repent and
believe in this good news.
The good news isn’t
how to fight temptation. The good news is that Jesus fought temptation. It’s
not about what you do. It’s about accepting what Jesus did for you.
It’s silly to despise
people who do nice things for you – like snowblowing your driveway. It’s easy
to resent people who are so much better at things than you are. It’s likely to hate
people who get it right when you so often get it wrong.
But Jesus always got
it right … not to make you hate him … not to give you an example to live up to …
but as your Substitute. Jesus has already battled in the wilderness for you. His
victory is your victory. Amen.
Repent and believe
in the gospel. Amen.
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