A Lenten Blog, Day 7
Jesus’ Own Fast
To answer the question of “Why fast?” that i finished with in yesterday's blog entry we need to return to the scene of Jesus’ own fast, and the temptations that followed immediately afterwards. First, three qualifiers. I’m indebted to church historian, theologian and New Testament scholar N.T. Wright for much of the thinking in this entry. Note that the fast and the temptations came together. And note also that the temptations followed straight after Jesus’ great moment of vision, when His sense of calling and love was so dramatically confirmed at his baptism, described in the previous chapter.
The writer to the Hebrews tells us that Jesus was tempted like other humans, in every possible way (4.15). Jesus HAD to face the whispering voices and recognise them for what they were: ways of distorting His true vocation, the vocation to be a truly human being, to be God’s person,
to be a servant to the world and to other people. Jesus must face these temptations now, and win at least an initial victory over them. If He doesn’t, they will meet Him suddenly, in the middle of his work, and they may overwhelm Him.
to be a servant to the world and to other people. Jesus must face these temptations now, and win at least an initial victory over them. If He doesn’t, they will meet Him suddenly, in the middle of his work, and they may overwhelm Him.
I’ve read many analyses regarding the nature of the 3 temptations Jesus faced down, but Wright’s insight, of tying them in with the baptism and affirmation of God the Father he has just experienced is particularly helpful. The first 2 temptations play to the very strength he has just received. Paraphrased, they go like this:
“If you really are God’s beloved Son, surely you can’t go hungry when you have the power to get food for yourself. You of all people shouldn’t go without! You’re too important for that. And surely you want people to see who you really are! Why not do something truly spectacular?”
“If you really are God’s beloved Son, surely you can’t go hungry when you have the power to get food for yourself. You of all people shouldn’t go without! You’re too important for that. And surely you want people to see who you really are! Why not do something truly spectacular?”
Then, dropping the apparent logic and the references to Scripture the enemy comes out boldly:
“Forget your heavenly father. Worship me and i’ll give you power, greatness like no one else ever had.”
“Forget your heavenly father. Worship me and i’ll give you power, greatness like no one else ever had.”
Jesus sees through the trap. He answers, each time, from the bible and with God. He is committed to living from God’s Word, to trusting God completely without setting up trick tests that put God on the spot. He is committed to loving and serving God alone.
And here, I think, comes the point of Lenten discipline, including the practice of fasting. To reference Martin Luther’s unholy trinity: the flesh may scream for satisfaction; the world may beckon seductively; the devil himself may offer undreamed-of power. But Israel’s loving God, the one Jesus knew as Father, offered the reality of what it meant to be human, to be a true Israelite, to be Messiah.
But to be able to first distinguish, then follow the voice of God among the voices seeking to drown it out requires discipline, spiritual muscle. Every time I hear about yet another Christian leader who has failed morally I remember my mentor’s sobering statistic: of the bible’s approximately 400 leaders only about ¼ finished well. But to do that I must undergo spiritual discipline, and live in a disciplined way, like Jesus did. And to achieve this goal it helps to realise that I am/we are parts of a great story.
The biblical texts Jesus used as his key weapons against temptation help us to see how this story fits into Matthew’s gospel at this point. They are all taken from the story of Israel in the wilderness. Jesus came through the waters of baptism like Israel crossing the Red Sea. He faced, in 40 days and nights, the equivalent of Israel’s 40 years in the desert. But where Israel failed again and again, Jesus succeeded.
“Here at last is a true Israelite,” Matthew was saying. “He has come to do what God always wanted Israel to do - be a light to the nations.”
“Here at last is a true Israelite,” Matthew was saying. “He has come to do what God always wanted Israel to do - be a light to the nations.”
Behind that again is the even deeper story of Adam and Eve in the garden. A single command, a single temptation, a single, devastating result. But Jesus kept his eyes on the father, and so launched the mission to undo the age-old effects of human rebellion. He would meet the tempter again in various guises: protesting, through His closest associate, that he should change His mind about going to the cross; mocking him, through the priests and bystanders, as he hung on the cross. These whispers were all designed to distract Him from his central vocation, the path of servanthood that would lead to his suffering and death. They were meant to stop Him from carrying out God’s Calling, to redeem Israel and the world.
The temptations we all face may be very different from the ones Jesus faced down, but they have exactly the same purpose. They are not simply trying to entice us to commit this or that sin. They are trying to distract us, to turn us aside, from the path of servanthood to which our baptism has commissioned us. God has a costly but glorious vocation for each one of us. The enemy will do everything possible to distract us and thwart God’s purpose in us. If we have heard God’s voice welcoming us as His children, we will also hear the whispered suggestions of the enemy. But as God’s children we are entitled to use the same defence as the Son of God Himself: Store Scripture in your heart, and know how to use it! Keep your eyes on God, and trust God for everything. Remember your calling, to bring God’s light into the world. Live Lenten lives of godly discipline. And say a firm ‘no!’ to the voices that lure you back into the darkness.