In Matthew
Mondays, we’ve been looking at the temptation of Christ and how Jesus was
tempted in all the ways we are within the trinity of man: body, spirit, and
soul as per Hebrews
4:15 and 1
Thessalonians 5:23.
In the previous weeks we’ve looked at how Satan tempted
Christ in body and how Satan
tempted Christ in spirit. This week
we’re going to look at how Satan tempted Christ in soul.
The soul of a human being is the seat of the mind, will, and
emotions. And while temptations
affecting the body are often about survival and comfort and temptations affecting
spirit are often about the supernatural, temptations that lure our soul are all
about control.
Let’s look at how the temptation plays out:
Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain and showed
him all the kingdoms of the world and their splendor.
"All this I will give you," he said, "if you
will bow down and worship me." (Matthew
4:8-9)
Satan’s offer is to give Jesus control of the whole world in
exchange for worshiping him instead of God, basically submitting to Satan
rather than God.
This is the last and perhaps the greatest of the
temptations. It’s easy to empathize with
the first temptation. We all get
hungry. We all want to live
comfortably. Only a crazy person says,
“boy, I’d sure like to experience some pain and suffering today.” The second temptation of the spirit is easy
to understand too. Who doesn’t want to
see something miraculous? Ask any
atheist what it would take to convince them that God exists, and they’ll give
you some impossible sign for proof.
The last one is a bit more subversive because it is a
temptation that we rarely recognize as such.
It’s the temptation of free will.
Will we submit to God every moment of every day, or will we pursue our
own agendas and try to control our own lives?
Will we be driven by our own desires, swayed by flippant emotions, or
led by our own understandings, or will we seek God’s desires, God’s emotions,
and God’s understanding, and let these be what guide our path.
What makes this particular temptation so hard is that
sometimes we know what God wants, but we think we can speed up His process and
do things on our own. That’s what Satan
is tempting Jesus with in this example.
Ultimately the submission and obedience of our body, soul,
and spirit to the Almighty God are what worship is all about, which is why
Jesus responds to Satan the way He does:
Jesus said to him, "Away from me, Satan! For it is
written: 'Worship the Lord your God, and serve him only.'" (Matthew
4:10)
1 comment:
Amen! May we worship our Father with the submission of our body, soul, and spirit! "Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God--this is your spiritual act of worship." (Romans 12:1) Thank you for this beautifully-written post about the temptations of Christ...and the powerful lessons about love and life we find therein!
Post a Comment