Jesus crushed the Serpent, the Devil under His feet at the Cross. Jesus wins. |
“And don’t let
us yield to temptation,
but rescue us from the evil one”
(Matthew 6:13,
NLT).
Traditionally the first
half of this verse asks, “Lead us not
into temptation” (KJV), but a more accurate translation is “Don’t let us yield to temptation.” God doesn’t
tempt us, as James clearly states: “When you are
being tempted, do not say, ‘God is tempting me.’ God is never tempted to do
wrong, and he never tempts anyone else. Temptation comes from our own desires,
which entice us and drag us away” (James 1:13-14, NLT). At times God allows us to be tempted, as a
test. But this testing always has a purpose. Always. God continually works
to refine his people, teach them to depend on him. How he does this differs in
every person’s life. Don’t try to compare.
The next line has been
translated “Deliver us from evil” (KJV), but the
more accurate translation is “Rescue us from
the evil one.” Satan, the evil one, is actively looking for ways to
harm God’s people, to throw them off course. Jesus wanted his followers to
place their trust in God during trying times and to pray for deliverance from “the evil one” and his deceit. We can’t – absolutely can’t – resist
temptation or defeat in our own strength; we must depend on God working in us
and in our situation. Believers who pray these last lines of the Lord’s Prayer seriously will realize
their sinful nature and their need to depend on God in the face of temptation.
Think about this: All
Christians struggle with temptation. A temptation can be so subtle that we
don’t even realize what is happening. Yet hear this promise: “God is faithful. He will not allow the temptation
to be more than you can stand. When you are tempted, he will show a way out so
that you can endure” (1 Corinthians 10:13, NLT). When
temptations hit, thank God for trusting you that much, ask him to show you what
to do, and pray for his strength to deliver you from the evil one. Ask God to
show you ways to resist and endure, and thank him in advance for his promise of
deliverance.
The truth is Jesus himself
when he became human were being tempted (Matthew 4) but he never sinned. The Bible
says Jesus “shared fully in our experience of
temptation, except that he never sinned. Let us therefore approach the throne
of grace will fullest confidence, that we may receive mercy for our failures
and grace to help in the hour of need” (Hebrew 4:15-16, J.B.
Philips). Thus, as man, Jesus experiences our temptations; as God, he is able
to rescue us from temptation and the deceits of the evil one. And even if we
fall into temptation (it won’t be long, repent), his mercy and grace is there
to lift you up again. Amen.
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.
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