Sunday, March 6th, 2022 – St. David’s Day Sunday (Lent 1)
Philip’s Reflection: “Lead us not into Temptation”
“May the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable to you,
O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.” Amen
As we enter the season of Lent, we hear the familiar story of Jesus’ temptation in the
wilderness and we look for meaning for times such as these. From Luke’s account, the
“forty days” of Jesus’ retreat into the wilderness occurs early in his public ministry – in
fact soon after his baptism in the Jordan River. You’ll remember there that, while Jesus
was praying after his baptism, the heavens opened, the Holy Spirit descends on Jesus
like a dove, and a voice is heard from heaven “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I
am well pleased” (Luke 3: 21-22). Luke tells us that Jesus is “about thirty years old
when he began his work” (Luke 3:23) and he is now “full of the Holy Spirit” (Luke 4:1).
For forty days in the wilderness, Luke says, Jesus “ate nothing” at the end of his fast, he
was, in Luke’s words, “famished” and probably barely alive.
For the people of Israel, “the wilderness” is a highly symbolic place – it’s in the
wilderness, at Mt. Sinai, that God meets the Jewish people after rescuing them from
Egypt; it’s in the wilderness that the prophet Isaiah hears the voice of one crying out
“Prepare the way of the Lord” (Is 40:3) and it’s also where God speaks to John the
Baptist.
Jesus’s wilderness experience is no less significant – we’re told he is led there by the
Holy Spirit for this first significant event of his public ministry (Luke 4:1). And we should
view the temptations placed in front of Jesus by the devil, more as a time of testing,
rather than temptation – in fact Luke refers at the end of the story to the devil having
“finished every test” (Lk 4:12) – “If you are the Son of God”, [says the devil] turn this
stone into bread (Lk 4:3); “If you, then, will worship me, [all the kingdoms of the world] it
will all be yours” (Lk 4:7); “If you are the Son of God” throw yourself down from the
pinnacle of the Temple of Jerusalem and you will be miraculously saved (Lk 4:9). “If you
are the Son of God” - in other words, we can understand these temptations as the first
of many tests in the life of Jesus, testing the validity of God’s claim that Jesus is indeed
the “beloved Son of God”.
As we’ve heard, Jesus passes all the tests, he resists the devil’s challenges by
responding with sayings from the Book of Deuteronomy, the fifth book of the Torah,
containing the final discourse of Moses, the greatest of all Jewish prophets. “One does
not live by bread alone” says Jesus (Lk 4:4, Deut. 8:3) – life is more than food, life is
more than serving one’s own interests – in fact Jesus’ entire ministry will be focused on
others, not himself; “Worship the Lord your God, and serve only him” (says Jesus) (Lk
4:8, Deut 6:13) – there is only one who is worthy of true worship and service and it’s not
the devil, Jesus’ mission is about saving others, not about establishing power or
authority over the world; and, when challenged to throw himself off the Temple, Jesus
reveals God’s true character – “Do not put your Lord to the test” he says (Lk 4:12, Deut
6:16).
What does this story of Jesus’ in the wilderness, this time of testing, have to say
to us today as we enter the season of Lent? Well, first of all, as we’ll see, it doesn’t
have much to do with traditional notions of temptation; yes, by refusing to turn stones
into bread, Jesus does deny the temptation to satisfy his personal needs and desires;
but it has very little to do with the temptation to give up chocolate, or a glass of wine, or
even to lose a few pounds during Lent. It means that, when our own faith is tested,
when we are faced with temptation, we have a choice - to serve our own needs, or to
serve God – I remember when my son Chris, as a young boy, came back from his first
camp, he was given a bracelet to wear with the letters “WWJD” – “what would Jesus
do?” – it served as a kind of “moral compass” that can also serve us when faced with
difficult personal choices.
As I’ve suggested, Jesus’ time in the wilderness is less about “giving things up for Lent”,
or even about making wise or ethical choices, than it is about testing his identity – “If
you are the Son of God…” – says the devil and, as we emerge from the wilderness of a
global pandemic, it’s a time when we too are asked tough questions – “What kind of a
person are you?”; “Who really are you, individually and as the community of St. David’s
United Church?” And at this time of Lent we confess that at times we have failed the
test, and we seek forgiveness, and we try to redirect our steps on the way of Jesus.
And, as they did for Jesus, these questions come at a challenging time. We too have
been weakened in the wilderness; we are tired, and we are vulnerable and as we know,
when we are fatigued, anxious about our safety or survival, and the safety of loved
ones, our resistance is lowered, our “immune systems” if you like are compromised. We
may not be “famished” but we are certainly hungry for a sense of direction and God’s
purpose.
And then, just as we are emerging from this wilderness, when many of our reserves of
patience, resilience, yes and even our faith, have been tested, when we have seen
glimpses of a brighter future, of green shoots, new life in the Spring sunshine, the whole
world is again plunged into a time of confusion and anxiety, by the unprovoked and
unlawful attack on the sovereign, independent nation of Ukraine, with the aim of
overthrowing a democratically elected government through a merciless attack on the
Ukrainian people.
The war in Ukraine is evil, demonic evidence, as if we needed any, that the devil is still
at work in the world. And as in the wilderness for Jesus, we are tempted, we are being
tested, and even as we pray for God’s mercy and intervention, to bring compassion into
the hearts of those responsible for this humanitarian disaster, we also struggle for a
sense of “What would Jesus do?”, how are we to respond, as followers of Jesus -
1. when the people of Ukraine appeal for the imposition of a “no-fly zone”, that would
prevent Russian aircraft from overflying and bombing Ukrainian population centres but
potentially escalate the conflict by involving NATO warplanes;
2. or how are we to welcome the thousands of Ukrainian refugees who will apply for
refuge in Canada when, as a country, we are still so slowly processing applications from
tens of thousands of refugees from Afghanistan and Syria? Who is in the greatest need
and what is a fair, and faithful, way of prioritizing those needs without racial bias?
3. “What would Jesus do?” when confronted by the “enemies” of peace and justice in
Ukraine – we are called to “seek justice and resist evil”? – but how do we reconcile that
with “loving our enemies”? And who are our enemies in this situation – how are we to
resist evil within the Russian leadership without immiserating the Russian people?
An international crisis is a wilderness time for individual and communal testing – yes, we
may be tempted to retaliate, to discriminate, and to demonize. But, let’s be clear, these
are not the ways of Jesus – who blesses the peace-makers, who calls us to bring good
news to the poor, to proclaim release to the captives… to let the oppressed go free” (Lk
4:18-19). Jesus was tested by the devil in the wilderness and he showed resilience, the
denial of his own self-interest, and an absolute dependence on God. May his example
be a source of strength for the people of Ukraine; may it also strengthen our own faith in
times like these, when we more fully appreciate our own dependence on God, when it
seems almost beyond human capacity to reconcile; and may Jesus teaching and
example, when confronted by evil, cause us to open our hearts in generous ways to all
who seek refuge in this country, from whatever war zone they may be fleeing.
Jesus says to the devil “Do not put the Lord your God to the test” – and we might add,
for those who order the evil bombing and indiscriminate shelling of Ukrainian or Syrian
or Afghan or Sudanese town and cities, you will be judged, not only by history, but by a
just God. And it is to God, the God of enduring love and compassion, despite our many
failings, that we pray now, as we ask God to bring this needless war to a rapid end,
without further loss of life, for we know that, as the people of Ukraine suffer, God must
be weeping and, like ours, God’s heart must be breaking. Loving God, hear our prayer.
Amen.