In this article we will look at the
opposite in response example, the example of our Lord Jesus Christ and how He
responded to temptation, which will also teach us how we too should respond to
it. So starting from Matthew 4:1-3
we read:
Matthew 4:1-3
"Then was Jesus led up by the Spirit into
the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. And when he had fasted forty days
and forty nights, afterward he was hungry. Now when the tempter came to him, he
said, "If you are the Son of God, command that these stones become
bread."
Before we say anything else, how do you think that the
devil spoke to Jesus Christ here? For many years, because of religious
influence, I tended to think that a dark-skin being with two horns was speaking
here. But where does the Bible describes the devil like this? Nowhere.
According to the Bible, the devil is a spirit being, a fallen angel, that has
no material substance. How therefore did the devil speak, tempting Jesus here?
The answer is obvious: by revelation. And if he managed to do that with Jesus,
he can surely do that with the others of us too. Therefore, it is not enough
that something comes from the spiritual ground. It must also come from the
right source of the spiritual ground. Something that comes from God
is always in 100% alignment with the Bible, the Word of God, and even amid
persecution carries the blessing and peace of God.
Returning to our example, see that the pattern the
devil followed in the temptations of Jesus is
the same as the pattern he followed with Eve in Genesis, when he tempted
her. He again tried to challenge what God said and which was that Jesus is the
Son of God (Matthew 3:17). Did the devil not know that Jesus was the Son of
God? Surely he knew it. But the focus of his temptation was to make Jesus doubt
his true identity. How did Jesus answer to the devil? Verse 4 tells us:
Matthew 4:4
"But he answered and said, IT IS WRITTEN man shall not live by bread alone, but
by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God"
To face the temptation Jesus knew that what he needed
was the Word of God. Look how sharp He was: His first words were "it is
written.." and He quoted the passage of the Bible that was relative to the
temptation. That's how He defeated the devil and his temptation and that's how
you and I can also defeat him.
The devil having failed in the first temptation
continued to a second one. The pattern was the same:
Matthew 4:5-6
"Then the devil took him up into the holy
city, set him on the pinnacle of the temple, and said to him, "if you are
the Son of God, throw yourself down: for it is written, "He shall give his
angels charge over you": and "in their hands they shall bear you up,
lest at any time you dash your foot against a stone."
As the above passage makes clear, the devil can also
use the Bible. However, he misuses it. He distorts it deceitfully and
intentionally, making wrong interpretations of the Word of God. So what he
quoted was indeed from the Bible, from Psalms 91:11-12. But then he deceitfully
interpreted this as it would still apply if Jesus went ahead and, tempting God
to see whether He would save him, jumped off the pinnacle of the temple. Of
course tempting God was not in the scope of the promise of Psalms 91:11-12! Jesus’
reaction was again very sharp:
Matthew 4:7
"Jesus said to him, "It is written
again you shall not tempt the Lord your God"
See the straight and direct response of Jesus to the
temptation. No wavering. No “let’s think… uh.. oh… I believe… perhaps…”.
Instead He knew exactly what the Word said, interpret it correctly and
triumphed over the devil’s temptations second time as he would also do in the
next and final temptation:
Matthew 4:8-9
"Again the devil took him up on an
exceedingly high mountain, and 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"
Here the devil plays his last card. He would
supposedly give Jesus everything if He would “just” worship him. But again his
temptation failed terribly, and here is why:
Matthew 4:10
"Then Jesus said to him, Away with you,
Satan: for IT IS WRITTEN "You shall worship the Lord your God, and Him
only you shall serve."
Many people say "Away with you Satan" when
they feel his pressure, presence and temptation. But Jesus Christ did not stop
there. He also added: "IT IS WRITTEN.......", stating accurately what
the Word of God said about the subject of temptation. The result of His tactic
is given in verse 11:
Matthew 4:11
"Then the devil left him"
Do you think that the devil would have left Jesus if
he hadn't faced him the way he did? I don’t think so. As James 4:7 says, the
only way to get rid of the devil is to resist him:
James 4:7
"Resist the devil and he will flee from
you".
Jesus’ example tells us that to resist the devil and his temptations you must know accurately and apply with consistency the Word of God. Eve did not do that. The results are well-known. You and I must determine what are we going to do? Shall we rightly divide the Word of God independently of doctrines of men and denominational views or we will follow man-made traditions? As far as God is concerned there is only one right choice: "Study to show yourself approved to God a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth." (2 Timothy 2:15).