Temptation
Transcript
Good morning. My name is Spencer. I'm one of the pastors here. We are in the Gospel of Matthew. We're in week two. We're going to be in chapter four, verses one through eleven today.
We started off the Gospel of Matthew last week in chapter three, which was the announcement of John the Baptist. Jesus, the kingdom is at hand and introduced this theme that we're going to see throughout the Gospel of Matthew. The kingdom has come and the king has arrived. And I said last week that part one of Jesus beginning his ministry, part one of this beginning of this kingdom was at his baptism. It's a miraculous, powerful, even Trinitarian event. Jesus goes into the water.
The heavens open up. The Holy Spirit descends on Jesus like a dove. The Father looks at the Son and says, This is my Son with whom I am well pleased. It's this big, bold entrance. And I said that was part one. And part two of the beginning of his ministry is this week.
And it starts off in chapter four, verse one. Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. And it kind of takes a pretty interesting turn, which brings up a whole bunch of questions. The Holy Spirit leads Jesus out to be tempted in the wilderness. Is it possible for Jesus to fall to sin? Is that what's happening here?
How is it possible for God to sin? Why is he beginning this ministry with this period of testing and trials? And the more that we dig into it, you start to see there's some differences between Matthew and Luke and how they tell this story. What is happening? There's some big theological questions, which get easier, because today we've got to dive into the incarnation, which is always easy to understand how Jesus is both God and man. But we'll wade through some of these questions, and what we're going to see as we wrestle with a very serious subject is more of the gospel on display.
And it is a serious subject. This is the temptation of Christ. This is Jesus in the wilderness being tempted by sin, which for many of us brings up a whole bunch of different struggles, a whole bunch of different hurts, and a whole bunch of different fights as we were against sin. So I'd say there are probably two groups of people that will hear this, two groups of people that can approach this text. The first group is a group of us that realize we have a real war with sin. We feel it.
That we feel this daily battle of going to war with the flesh, going to war with the enemy. We have real battles with sin. We feel the shame of sexual sin and temptation. We feel the weight of anxiety and warring against that. Some of you came off a week where you went off the handle in a fit of rage, and you were still reeling from that. We understand this as a people that struggle with jealousy and strife, that messes up relationships we have with one another.
We feel this. The first group of people, we know this. This passage is real for us in a way that others, it's hard for us to see. But we vividly see this. And I want to say today, as we walk through this, this passage brings hope, that it brings good news to you. But there is a second group of people that I'm sure that looks at this, and is going to hear a lot of this and say, okay, I would admit that nobody's perfect.
Everyone has some sin. Okay. But the way that you're talking about this, and the way that you're going about this, seems a little bit dramatic. It seems a little bit over the top. I don't think that what you are going to describe is as big a deal as you're actually making it out to be. I had a professor in seminary that he told us this story of cows being slaughtered at a specific slaughterhouse.
And he said, at this slaughterhouse, they would bring the cows in, and they'd shove them onto a conveyor belt line, and they'd go up the conveyor belt line, and they'd be slaughtered, turn into hamburger meat and steaks. And it scared the cows, and it unnerved them. And that matters because what was happening was, is that the meat was tainted, that a cow that has a bunch of hormones raging through its system because it's scared right before it dies, that's not a good stake. So they devised a system, this gentle system that they bring in the cows. They put them through this nice gentle shoot, and that gentle shoot was meant to kind of make it feel like being next to a mother calf that was comforting.
Then they ease them into the slaughterhouse. They bring them through on this gentle path up the slaughterhouse conveyor belt, and then slowly they're starting to go up to be slaughtered. This cow has got his friend right in front of him. He's like, Carl, how's it going up there? You doing all right? Carl?
Carl? Boom! Done. Turn into steaks and hamburgers. It's a pretty graphic story. And his point was, that is exactly what temptation is like.
It lures you in. It makes you feel comfortable. It gets you with your guard down, and then slowly as it lures you in, it destroys you. And we've seen this. And we feel this. In our culture, the church feels this.
As temptation lures you in. As a click on the internet turns into pervasive use of pornography and affairs. As a simple jealous thought with a friend turns into an absolute false narrative that ends in an explosive argument and parting. Like, we feel this. It lures you in, and then it brings you in to destroy you. That is the reality.
And if you think that all of this is dramatic, you are mistaken, and you are on the conveyor belt, and you cannot see where you are going. And the hope today is that as we walk through this story, you would see the reality of your situation. That temptation is real, and that there is hope for all of us. So let me pray, and then we'll dive in. God, I pray that you would help us see the seriousness of this. That we'd feel it.
God, I pray that you would help us see the good news of this. That as we walk through this story, we would glean from how you battled against the devil. And that ultimately, we would see the hope that comes from this. We ask this in Jesus' name. Amen. Alright, so, Jesus is being taken by the Holy Spirit out to the wilderness to be tempted.
We're going to walk through three different temptations that he goes through one by one. But we've got to start off in that first verse. Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. Alright, two things out the gate. First thing you see is that the third member of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit, is leading the second member, Jesus, out to be tempted by the devil in the wilderness. Which brings up all kinds of questions.
Like, what? What is happening? Is it even, is it possible for Jesus to fall to sin? I want to say very clearly, temptation in and of itself is not sin. It is the luring you in to sin. But is it possible for Jesus to fall here?
Well, the complicated answer to that is yes and no. I'm about to give you a very unsatisfying answer as we wade through some paradoxes and mysteries that come with the incarnation. Jesus has always been God. Eternally has existed as God. A hundred percent God. When he became man, which we celebrate at Christmas, he took on humanity.
He did not give up his divinity. He did not give up being God to be man. He was a hundred percent God, always has been. But when he became a man, we celebrate at Christmas, he took on a hundred percent humanity. This is not a 50-50 exchange. He is a hundred percent God and he is a hundred percent man.
It is a mystery that we will never fully understand. So, because he is fully God, he cannot sin. It is not his nature to sin. Because he is fully human, he is weak and it is possible. How that works out, we do not understand. It is a mystery.
We are finite beings trying to understand the infinite. So, now that I've sufficiently broken our brains on that, we have a second barrier to get through and that is Satan. That we as a Western American culture don't really have good categories for the devil. We don't. We just, we're confused by a whole bunch of stuff that for centuries, for hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of years, Western art has really trivialized Satan. Shows up in art as, he's got a pitchfork.
He's kind of threatening, but not really. And that kind of has shown up in our culture. If he's not trivialized and made light of, he's romanticized by different parts of our culture. Cultic circles, by metal, metal, by different dark art forms that really celebrate Satan. And then if you're not confused by that, Hollywood, who has made billions of dollars off of demons. I mean, from The Exorcist, which, I mean, for many of us, movies like this is our first interaction with demons.
My first two interactions with this subject were when I was five and I watched Ghost, which should lead you to question my parents' decision and let me watch Ghost with them. But it was terrifying because there's little demons that come up and take people to hell and ghosts and it scared the mess out of me. My second interaction was The Exorcist, y'all. I watched that when I was eight or nine and it scared the pants off of me. I slept. It was the only time I ever slept on my parents' floor in their room.
I mean, it was terrifying. And I mean, y'all, paranormal activity, there's like ten of those. There's Conjuring movies. There's Annabelle movies. There are billions of dollars made off these franchises. And it all confuses who he is.
It all either makes light of or too much of. And I just want to take a moment and briefly say who he is and who he isn't. So this is who Satan is. He is an individual. He is an individual. That we get from the Old Testament that he was an angel that once led a rebellion against God and God cast him into the earth.
And his goal ever since then has been to destroy the fabric of God's good creation. That he shows up in the garden in the form of a serpent. He tempts Adam and Eve and causes them to rebel against God. This is what he does. He's called a deceiver. He's called the father of lies.
He's called the prince of this world, which means he has power in this world. He's called the tempter. He is an individual who has power to deceive us in this world. Now let me explain who he is not. He is not omnipresent, which means he is not in all places at all times. Because sometimes the way we talk about him is that he's literally listening in to every conversation.
That he's behind every problem. He's not, because he's not God. We can't talk about him like he's at all places, like he's behind every rock. He is not. It's better to have the framework that we see in the Gospels, that Jesus is the figurehead of evil. And there are demons that are all over the place in the Gospels.
It's better to see that and not falsely attribute that he is everywhere in all places at all times. So he has power in this world, but he is not God. That is who he is. And he shows up here to tempt Jesus. All right, now we're through those two barriers.
Let's jump into the story. Verse 2. And after fasting 40 days and 40 nights, he was hungry. This is how Jesus has chosen to prepare for this moment. That if you were part of our fasting and feasting sermon a few months ago, this makes sense. That part of fasting is physically weakening yourself so that you might be spiritually dependent on God.
So what he's doing here is he's physically weakening himself. And Luke gives us some more details that this is an extreme fast. He has not eaten. We talked about the general fast where you'd fast throughout the day and you'd eat at night. This fast is an extreme one. He has not eaten for 40 days.
All he has done is he has drank in water. That's it. He has physically weakened himself that he might be so spiritually dependent by the Holy Spirit and God the Father for this moment. Because this is a cosmic battle that has been waiting. Ever since the garden, ever since Adam and Eve fell, there's been this moment that the whole Bible has been building up to. That in the garden there was a proclamation that one day a seed of Eve was going to come.
And he was going to crush the head of Satan. He was going to have his heel bruised. And it's looking forward to this moment when Jesus has this showdown with the enemy. It is a cosmic battle with a lot of anticipation. Think anticipation. Have you ever seen Save a Private Ryan when they're getting ready to...
The ships are getting ready to hit the beaches of Normandy. It's getting ready to... The doors are getting ready to fall. There's this moment where they're just capturing this waiting, just anticipating for this battle to go down. This is a battle of cosmic proportions. And it's getting ready to go down and Satan comes into this scene.
Verse 3. And the tempter came and said to him, If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become loaves of bread. He is called a tempter and he gets right to work like he did with Adam and Eve. So before we get to his first temptation, we've got to capture a little bit of what his motive is. That yes, he does seek to kill, steal, destroy. He does seek to destroy the good fabric of God's creation.
But what is his goal specifically here? And you see a little bit of in how he addresses Jesus. He calls him Son of God. This is a challenge to his identity. And what we're going to see is that he is going to attempt to use Jesus' power against himself. This week, Chet sent me a podcast.
And at the end of it, they had this discussion on Russian interference in democracies. Which, slow your roll. I'm not going where you think I'm going. Just breathe. But it was interesting because what they were describing was is that they've been largely on social media all across the world in democracies.
They've been creating memes and fake videos and fake Facebook groups. But what they were getting at was is kind of the why behind all of this. And it really goes back to their leader. That Vladimir Putin, before he was the prime minister, before he was a KGB agent, he was the president of a judo club. And that many of the oligarchs who helped rule Russia were also a part of this judo club. Judo is a mixed martial art form.
The general, and I'm not an expert on this, if you want to know more about this, you can talk to Boneweed. He does Kung Fu. But the basics of judo is that you use someone's force against themselves. They come at you to throw a punch, you divert, use their force against them. And that makes sense when you look at Vladimir Putin. That's how they have engaged in this type of quiet warfare for years now.
That they interfere in democracies and what they do all across the world is they seek to exploit weaknesses and to use countries' power against themselves so that they will divide them. So they have fake memes and videos. They spread throughout all of our culture and other countries throughout the world. They'll exploit racial division. They'll exploit division between left and right. One of my favorite examples of this, they did this in their own country.
They took this actor that works on behalf of the Kremlin, on behalf of the Russian government, and she acted like a feminist who was angry at manspreading. And if you've ever heard the term manspreading, it is when a guy takes up too much room on a subway seat or a bus seat. So she went into a subway and attacked men who were manspreading and took bleach and poured it on their crotches. And it got everyone riled up. Left and right. It was like, you know, the feminists on one side were like, yes!
And people on the other side were like, this is the worst! They do this all over the world because they seek to use our power against ourselves in order to divide us. And I cannot think of a better description of what Satan does. He absolutely comes in to use your power against yourself. He seeks to divide us. And that is exactly what he is doing here with Jesus.
He's seeking to divide him and separate him from fellowship with the Father in order to divide him. How does the last verse of chapter 3 end? It is God the Father saying, this is my beloved Son with whom I am well pleased. What is the first thing that Satan says? If you are the Son of God. He goes right at the heart of his identity and right at the heart of his present weakness, which is food.
He has not eaten for 40 days and 40 nights. And he says, use your power. Command these stones to become loaves of bread. Eat. Fill yourself. Don't suffer anymore.
Be satisfied. And that's a real temptation. He hasn't eaten for 40 days. If he came to us after like 4 hours, some of us would be like, maybe. I mean, it's just, he goes right at his weakness. His eat.
Jesus, just break the fast. Listen to me. Listen to my words. Use your power. You have the power to feed yourself. You have the power to be filled.
He is seeking to break him from the Father, finding his strength from him to trust the word of Satan. Take my provisions. It's so much like the garden. He says, eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Be filled. You are missing out.
So he comes at him. And then Jesus responds, because this is bigger than bread. Verse 4, it says, But he answered, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God. So he quotes Deuteronomy 8, which is a passage where Moses is trying to teach the nation of Israel, You need more than manna. You need more than bread. You need to live by every word that God gives you.
You have deeper needs that are bigger than the physical. You need to be reminded of your spiritual need, that you need God's word. And there's a lot of stuff that's happening here, that there's some connection between Moses and Jesus. But there's a real practical implication of what Jesus does here that I do not want us to miss. Jesus, the God of the universe, when going to war with Satan, quotes scripture. He uses the word of God to go at Satan.
That is how we should operate. We should see the Bible as a weapon. This is what Paul picks up on in Ephesians 6, when he tells them to put on the full armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the schemes of the devil. He's giving a metaphorical picture of how you would defend yourself against evil. Then he gets through all these different aspects of the armor, and then he gets to the sword of the spirit.
That is the word of God. The Bible is an offensive weapon that we use against the enemy. It is a way that we will combat his lies, that we will undercut his deception. The author of Hebrews picks up on this, and Hebrews 4, it's a weapon that's even used against our own flesh. It says, It is a weapon that is meant to be used against evil, and we have to see it as such. Because here's the deal.
If you don't know the Bible, you cannot quote it in a moment's notice. In the deep, darkest moments of temptation, if you don't know the word of God, you can't use it as a sword. You have nothing in your arsenal to go to war. That is why for the past couple of months, we have said in multiple sermons, and we're going to continue to say this, we want to grow in scripture memory in our church. We want to know the Bible. We introduced this a couple months ago, and we're continuing to roll this out, that every month we have a scripture memory verse.
It's going to be on the transition screens, before and after gatherings. It's going to be in your group content every week. Last month was Romans 6.23. This month is 2 Corinthians 5.17. And the hope is, is that we would memorize the word, that we'd store it deeply in our hearts. For the next 36 months, we're going to roll through a bunch of different verses, that had on different aspects of the Christian walk.
So we want to challenge you in your groups, to be doing this. To get together. So when you come together every week, have you memorized the passage for this month? The kids, we're doing the same curriculum as them. And sojourning kids, they're learning the same verses. So families, get together.
Memorize scripture. We need this. We need an arsenal. We need a sword. We need an offensive weapon, that will go to war with the enemy, so that we will withstand, in the moments of temptation, and we'd follow the model of our Savior, and that we defend ourselves against evil. So, get through the first temptation.
Verse 5. When the devil took him to the holy city, and 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 will command his angels concerning you, and on their hands they will bear you up, lest you strike your foot against the stone. Now, before we dive into this temptation, I want to address the differences between Matthew and Luke, and the way they tell this. Matthew puts this temptation second, Luke puts it third. They flip-flop their second and third.
I addressed this a little bit last week, that we are dealing with ancient historians, that the gospel writers tell their history, tell these stories differently. That we tell most of our events, this happened, and this happened, and this happened. That's not how the gospel writers tell these stories. They tell them theologically and thematically. They are doing different things in their stories. And I said there weren't a lot of examples, in our own culture of doing this.
I have one that I can come up with, and that is football highlights. Have you ever watched sports highlights? Every now and then, they don't tell, this happened in the first quarter, this happened in the second quarter. Every now and then, a star is born. A kid from Orange County, California, rises up. Ryan Helensky, against Charleston Southern High School football team.
And it's like, you watch those highlights, and they're not tired, they don't care about the game, they care about the star that is born, that hopefully will bring us out, of the ashes of mediocrity. And it'll tell it thematically. And that is what they are doing here. They are doing different things, with these stories. Matthew, puts the third and final temptation, which deals with the kingdom, because it fits into his theme of kingdom, in the gospel. Luke is doing something different.
He has a little bit of a focus on Jerusalem, so he puts Jerusalem out of the third temptation. So, that's to explain that difference. We're going to see this happen throughout, the gospel of Matthew, and how they tell stories. Alright, so with that in mind, let's look at the two aspects, of this temptation. Firstly, Satan addresses him, if you are the son of God, he is continuing to challenge his identity. It is a subtle deception, very similar to, what happened in the garden.
Did God really say? And I want us to really, to understand this. Because I, I would argue, the enemy is doing this, in your life, in some form or fashion. Y'all ever been in a group, where, someone comes and says something nice to you, they give you some encouragement, and then immediately, you walk away, and you think, ah, did they really mean that? Did, did they, did they even like me? I, I don't, I don't really believe this.
It's almost like, it's someone telling you, they don't really believe that. They don't, they don't really mean that. No one really loves you. You ever feel that? That's a subtle deception, that sows seeds of doubt. It's the same reason why, when you fall to sin, and instead of running to grace, and to Jesus, and his mercy, you go to self-loathing, and self-hatred.
There's this voice that comes in, and says, are you really a son of God? Are you really a daughter? Are you really a Christian? Because if you were, you wouldn't be like this. It's this subtle deception, that seeks to deceive us. He does it again.
If you are, the son of God, throw yourself, off the pinnacle of the temple. That's the highest point, of the temple. Just, throw yourself down. You'll be protected. And what does Satan do? He quotes Psalm 91.
He quotes scripture. See Jesus? You'll be taken care of. Go ahead. Do it. That highlights that scripture can be used for good, but it also can be used for evil.
For those of you that are still paying for cable, if you turn on TBN, Trinity Broadcast Network, you're going to see this. You're going to see a televangelist stand up, and say, come on, 2 Corinthians 9, sow your seed. God wants to take care of you, wants to bless you. It's a misuse of the Bible. It is literally out of the playbook of Satan. It is satanic.
Satanic. In the most literal use of that term, it is satanic. People do this all the time with the word of God. They twist it for their own selfish gain and purposes. And we'll do this as well. We will seek to justify ourselves.
When we don't like the Bible, it's like, I'm pretty sure the passage says something different. We feel this in our own church. And I've seen this in other churches, that there's this idea that if you're living together and you're not married, someone comes and confronts you. He says, ah, this is what the Bible says on sex before marriage. And it's like, ah, no, it's okay. We're good, because we're married in God's eyes.
And it's like, no, that's not what the Bible. You know, you have to enter into a covenant of marriage. You are misusing the Bible for your own gain. We do this. We use the Bible for reasons that are not what it was designed for. And we have to check ourselves.
And Jesus sees right through this. He understands what he is doing. And he fires back. Verse 7. Again, it is written, you shall not put the Lord your God to the test. He is not going to test the protection of the Father.
Because what Satan is doing here is he's still trying to undermine his relationship with the Father. He says, Jesus, do it. Just make the jump. You'll be okay. Angels will come. You'll be taken care of.
He seeks to undermine this in causing him to question God's goodness. It will actually take care of him. I know that we have done this. I feel this. Anytime that any of us lose a loved one, how many of us question, does God, if he cared, what if he intervened? Wouldn't he protect us?
Would he take care of this individual? This happens in providing. The promotions that we miss out on. The jobs that we don't get. Does God really love? Does God really care?
Does God really protect? Does God really for my good? There's this question that comes in that makes us almost want to even test that out. If God loves you, prove it on these terms. Take the jump. See what happens.
Here's the deal. Jesus knows that God loves him. He knows that the Father has infinite love for him. He knows in a moment's notice if he needed the protection, he would get it. He tells Peter this much later on in Matthew, in chapter 26, verse 53. In the night that he was betrayed, they come to take him.
Peter takes a sword, starts wielding it around. Not very well, because all he gets is an ear. But Jesus looks at him and he says, do you not think that I cannot appeal to my Father and he will at once send me more than 12 legions of angels? He knows that he's taken care of. He knows that in a moment's notice, he could call angels from heaven, he would be protected. But Jesus doesn't question the love of God based on circumstances.
He understands that certain circumstances will require you to suffer for a greater purpose. And that is something for us to remember as well. So Satan whispers these lies and Jesus, he knows who the real enemy is in this situation. And that's the hope. The hope is as a church that we would grow in this, that we would be so aware of false lies that come in from the enemy that we remember who the real enemy is. There's this moment in the second Hunger Games in Catching Fire.
Every now and then, some teen fiction is good, y'all. But in the second book, Katniss is getting ready to fight in the quarter quail. And her trainer, Hamish, comes and there's a lot of confusion as to who's the good guys, the bad guys in this battle. And Hamish says, remember who the real enemy is. And we need this. We've got to remember this.
This happens all the time in counseling. I have two people that are frustrated, that are fighting. And I say, hold up. Who's the real enemy? It isn't the person across the table. We have an enemy that wants to destroy your marriage, who wants to sow division, who wants to bring lies.
We've got to remember who the real enemy is. So this one fails. He comes for a third round of temptation. Verse 8. Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. And he said to him, All these I will give to you if you will fall down and worship me.
And Jesus said to him, Be gone, Satan. For it is written, You shall worship the Lord your God and him only shall you serve. And the devil left him and behold, angels came and were ministering to him. So Satan takes Jesus to a high mountain, shows him all the kingdoms. Look as far as you can see, Jesus. These are the kingdoms.
These can be yours. Just bow down. Worship me. The uncomfortable reality here is that Satan does have power. He has this kind of power. Jesus calls him in the Gospel of John the ruler of this world.
That is a title for someone who has authority in kingdoms of this world. that he has power. And Jesus sees right through it. He quotes Exodus 23, 25 reminding him that God the Father is the only one worthy of worship. And then he departs. Satan leaves. Luke tells us he leaves for a more opportune time later.
And Jesus is so physically weak in this moment, spiritually in need, that the angels come down and minister to him. And then it ends. That's the end of the temptation narrative. And it kind of has a little bit of an odd ending. It kind of feels a little bit off. Like, what actually just happened here?
Like, power is a real temptation. We feel that. That God offers us, or that Satan offers us things that we'll take them, that we'll try to advance. Okay, there's some real power, but what's the big deal about this being the final thing that he offers all of this to Jesus? Why is this such a big deal? I want to close with two reasons why this moment is huge and two reasons why our God is so good.
First, Satan offers exactly what Jesus came for. Y'all, we remember how this started, right? Matthew 3. Behold, the kingdom of God is, the kingdom of heaven is at hand. This is why Jesus came. He came to have a kingdom that was encompassing all the kingdoms, that was bigger.
He came to be the king of kings. Satan offers him exactly what he came for. Global domination with his kingdom, that's it. That's the end game. Satan offers it up to him. And he offers him a much easier path.
Man, this is a path with no suffering, with no pain, with no abandonment, with no cross. And to think he could have taken that offer and he would have avoided his friends leaving him. He would have avoided the torturing and the excruciating pain of the cross. He would have avoided God the Father whom he's enjoyed perfect fellowship with for eternity, pouring the full cup of his wrath on him. He could have avoided all of it. The offer was right there.
All he had to do was to bow down and he could have avoided all of it. But he chooses the harder path because a bigger and better kingdom is in mine. And how does the gospel of Matthew end with the Great Commission? Jesus says, all authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. All of it. Go therefore and make disciples.
That ultimately, because Jesus chooses the cross, we get a better kingdom. And that we get to be a part of this kingdom. Where the first Adam failed, the second Adam prevails. He rejects the offer of Satan and the kingdoms of this world for a greater, eternal, bigger kingdom that because of his blood on the cross, all of us get to be a part of. That is the good news of the gospel that we get to celebrate part one. Here is part two of why this is so good and why our God is so glorious.
We go to Hebrews 4, verse 15 and 16. It says, For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses. I want you to hear that. Who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin. Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in a time of need. Jesus endures all of this temptation for you and for me.
He comes. Feel this. The God of the universe comes, takes on human flesh, and then endures all of this temptation. I mean, that's what the text says. In every respect, in order that he might sympathize with our weaknesses, which means when the God of the universe humbled himself, everything was thrown at him. He understands sexual temptation being thrown at you.
He understands the passions of this world being thrown at you. He understands the struggle. He gets it. He walked in our shoes. Jesus knows what it feels like to want to be tempted to hate your enemies. But he doesn't.
On the cross he says, forgive them for they know not what they do. He knows what if the temptation for anger to come and this righteous anger where you start moving over into unrighteous anger, he stops. He knows the struggle. He knows the struggle of fighting sin. Temptation was thrown at him. He prevails.
He, in every respect, was tempted and tried. God, and he prevails. And he knows what it feels like to be so physically weak, to be so spiritually exhausted. The moments in group where you are so tired, the week was so hard, you feel how hard it is to follow Jesus and all you need is people in your group to just sit with you, to be able to say truth to you. He knows what it's like to have angels come and minister to him. Jesus gets the struggle.
Y'all, we have a high priest who gave up being in the heavens to take on flesh for us so he could walk on our shoes and show us the way. We do not have a distant deity who just stands in the heavens and says, obey. We have a God who got his hands dirty, who came down in the form of man, endured every temptation, and perfectly obeyed the law so that we would have a perfect record for us so that we have a Savior to stand in our place. We have a God who got his hands dirty. That is perfect love. It is love that we don't deserve.
It is the reason we get to celebrate and join in worship every week. That this King came, endured all the temptations, suffered in our place, paid the penalty that we deserve for sin.