“Then the devil took Jesus to Jerusalem, to the highest
point of the Temple, and said, ‘If you
are the Son of God, jump off! For the Scriptures say, ‘He will order his angels
to protect and guard you. And they will hold you up with their hands so you won’t
even hurt your foot on a stone.’’ Jesus responded, ‘The Scriptures also say, ‘You must not test the LORD your God.’’”
(Luke 4:9-12, NLT)
In this final temptation,
Satan took Jesus to the top of the Temple, the tallest building in the area.
The “highest point of the Temple”
probably would have been the corner wall that jutted out of the hillside,
overlooking the valley below. Here we see that Satan changed his tactics as he
tried to appeal to ego, to pride. He challenged Jesus to prove his identity, to
show off to the world that he was God’s Son. “Do something spectacular,” Satan was saying, “Make a grand entrance to let everyone know who you are! You’re more
than a carpenter’s son – you are the Son of God! You’ll be famous. Display your
power!” And what a great show it would have been: Jesus hurtling toward the group but rescued dramatically, at the last
moment, by angels!
Satan doesn’t denied
Jesus’ deity. He knew very well that Jesus is the Son of God (and Jesus doesn’t
denied it either). So what was this temptation all about? This temptation
epitomizes the third category of what the “world offers”
– pride in who we are and what we have
done (1 John 2:16). This was another blatant attempt to side-track Jesus
from fulfilling his purpose, which was to humble “himself
in obedience to God” and die “a criminal’s
death on a cross” (Philippians 2:8). Jesus rebuffed this temptation
by affirming his deity as he quoted Deuteronomy 6:16: “You
must not test the LORD your God.”
Think about this: The
appeal to pride is a huge temptation in our society today. Everyone seems to be
seeking the spotlight, self-promoting, trying to gain that moment of fame, to
be the next big thing, to be a star. Many people, even believers, will
compromise their morals values, faith, and goals to fulfil this lust for
popularity, significance, to be known and fame. But not Jesus and his followers.
Jesus’ way is humility, and he promises that “those
who are last now will be first then, and those who are first will be last”
(Matthew 20:16). Many of the most ‘insignificant’
people in the world will be great in Christ’s Kingdom. What matter is not how
many events we organized and attended or preaching great sermons or awesome
Church building project or the quality of our praise and worship sessions or
whatever we do in the name of religion to gain personal popularity and fame; what matter is how we measure up to God’s
standards, not the world’s – what matter is how God think.
Take a quiet time for yourself before the Lord today,
Examine your own pursuits of popularity or relevance.
Ask God to shift your personal longings to a strong
desire for his glory
and his purposes in the world. Seek Jesus to be
humble. Amen.
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.
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