“Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be
tempted there by the devil. For forty days and forty nights he fasted and
became very hungry. During that time the devil came and said to him, ‘If you are the Son of God, tell these stones
to become loaves of bread.’ But Jesus told him, ‘No! The Scriptures say, ‘People do not live by bread alone, but by
every word that comes from the mouth of God’” (Matthew 4:1-4, NLT).
During Jesus’
forty days in the wilderness, he fasted. Fasting, the practice of going without
food, and perhaps even water, was used as a way to focus on prayer and
preparation. As a human being, Jesus experienced hunger and thirst; in fact, he
must have been famished and physically weak after forty days. Satan’s first
temptation hit Jesus where he was most vulnerable.
This is Satan’s typical method of operation, attacking
where we are vulnerable and making the choice seem simple and logical: ‘Just
turn some of these stones into bread and have yourself a small meal.’ What
could possibly be so wrong about that? But more was going on here than a
seemingly compassionate suggestion for a hungry person to have lunch.
Satan began by
saying, “IF you are the Son of God.” Satan was
tempting Jesus with his own power. Satan
did not doubt that Jesus was the Son of God or that he could indeed make bread
from stones. He wanted Jesus to use his power in the wrong way at the wrong
time – to meet his own needs rather than fulfil his God-given mission.
(God-given power or authority or title shouldn’t be use for our own personal
needs. It is for us to serve others). But instead of getting into a discussion
or debate with Satan as what Eve had done in Genesis 3:1-7, Jesus refused to
entertain any doubt of God’s loving provision. He answered by quoting Scripture.
God’s Word is powerful to fight against
Satan’s temptation. Keep this in mind: Jesus came to earth to accomplish
the Father’s mission. Everything he said and did was directed toward that goal.
For Jesus, obedience to the Father’s mission was more important than food – no
matter how he felt, no matter what Satan said.
Think about
this: This first temptation was physical, often called “the
lust of the flesh” (1 John 2:16). Eating is not wrong; we have to
eat to live. But one of Satan’s strategies is to take something natural and
good and tempt us to use it the wrong way or/and at the wrong time. Our natural
desires are good, but they can drive us to sin if we’re not careful. Ask
yourself, how might meeting a physical need distract us from focusing well on
God? What physical temptation troubles you most? What can you do to resist?
Pray to God to help you fulfil your natural physical desires only in the right
ways, at the right time – and equip yourself with God’s Word.
‘People do not
live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God’
THINK
BIG. START SMALL. GO DEEP.
Reference:
Life Application Study Bible Devotional: Daily Wisdom
from the Life of Jesus (Tyndale
House Publishers, Inc., 2011)
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