It's difficult, isn't
it?
On Thursday I spent the
day, as I usually do on Thursdays, looking after my grandson.
He and his family have
just moved house, and there is a Homebase quite literally three
minutes' walk from where they live,
and I wanted to go
there as I wanted to buy some anti-mould stuff my daughter had been
recommending.
The trouble is, they
also had a lovely display of Malteaster Bunnies...
so of course I had to
buy a pack of mini-Bunnies to share with the family, didn't I?
And how often do we get
tempted to buy stuff like that – it might not be sweets, but very
often, the kind of food the supermarket has on special offer, or on
BOGOF, is the kind of food that is very tempting, but not very good
for you.
Okay, so eating the
wrong sort of food can scarcely be called a sin!
It might not be very
kind to horses, we've been learning this week, and it might not be
very good for us, but that's all.
But sometimes we find
it easy to be tempted to do wrong.
Perhaps we're tempted
to use our bodies in the wrong way,
or worse, to misuse
other people's bodies.
Or to misuse other
people full stop –
Jesus reminded us that
if we were angry with someone,
we needed to express
our anger in such a way that it didn't destroy the other person, or
put them down.
Jesus tells us that we
are to treat other people with the greatest possible respect for who
they are –
physically, emotionally
and spiritually.
And the rest of the New
Testament makes it clear that we aren't even supposed to think unkind
things about other people,
which it's very hard to
do at times!
We don't yet know the
truth about what happened between Oscar Pistorious and his girlfriend
in South Africa, but it does seem as though someone lost their temper
and things went tragically wrong.
We can be tempted, too,
not to get involved when a friend needs help or a listening ear;
we can be tempted to
ignore it when someone in the church is in difficulties.
We can be tempted to
steal –
even a few minutes' of
our employers' time to make a personal phone call or answer a
personal e-mail.
Although, of course,
most employers do allow a reasonable amount of that, but not all.
Some people like to
make a quick profit at the expense of their ethics – again, that
has come very clear from the horsemeat scandal.
And some poor folk are
addicted to things, drink or drugs or gambling or cigarettes or
something –
and it's terribly hard
for them to resist the temptation to indulge their habit.
I know –
I'm addicted to
cigarettes.
Oh, I've not smoked for
about 20 years –
19, I think, to be
accurate –
but I'm still addicted,
and one puff and I'd be
back to 40 a day in no time at all.
On the other hand, I
can claim no virtue for not being addicted to gambling –
it simply doesn't
interest me and I've never seen the point!
Different people are
tempted to different things.
I know that when I read
today's Gospel,
I often wonder what the
problem was –
what are these
so-called temptations?
But to Jesus, they were
very real, and very urgent.
He was being tempted to
misuse his divine powers,
to go for cheap glory
rather than the way of the cross.
Do people still enjoy
the Harry Potter books and films?
I love the books,
although I’ve only seen a few of the films;
I do prefer reading to
watching when it comes to fiction.
But sometimes, when I
read about the way they use their wands, I wonder why they bother –
I mean, whatever is the
point of using magic to draw the curtains, for instance;
can't they just pull
them by hand or with a cord, like everybody else?
Jesus did miracles,
sure, but they weren't like that.
They weren't just to
avoid bother, or to get something more easily.
That's why it was wrong
for him to turn the stones into bread –
it would have been a
cheap magic trick and would have done nothing to enhance God's glory.
It must have been so
insidious, mustn't it?
"Are you really
the Son of God?
Why don't you prove it
by making these stones bread?
You're very hungry,
aren't you?
If you're the Son of
God, you can do anything you like, can't you?
Surely you can make
these stones into bread?
But perhaps you aren't
the Son of God, after all...."
And so it would have
gone on and on and on.
We read Luke's account,
and it just sounds as though Jesus shook his head and said, "No,
it's written: you shall not live by bread alone!"
But it can't have been
that easy, can it?
If it were, it wouldn't
have been worth worrying about.
It's like I have no
interest in going to a casino,
or in playing games of
chance online or with others –
it just isn't my scene,
so I'm totally not virtuous if I don't do it!
But for someone who
finds that sort of thing the most enormous fun, it must be enormously
tempting:
"Oh, go on then;
you never know, you
might win!
They're offering £20
free if you sign up!"
And so on.
I do think, by the way,
that the constant ads for on-line betting sites must be really,
really difficult if you are addicted to gambling –
and make no mistake, it
can be a very real addiction,
one that can and has
destroyed families.
Jesus was also tempted
with riches and power beyond his wildest dreams –
at that, beyond our
wildest dreams,
if only he would
worship the enemy.
We can sympathise with
this particular temptation;
I'm sure we all would
love to be rich and powerful!
But for Jesus, it must
have been particularly subtle –
it would help him do
the work he'd been sent to do!
Could he fulfil his
mission without riches and power?
What was being God's
beloved son all about, anyway?
Would it be possible to
spread the message that he was beginning to realise he had to spread
if he was going to
spend his life in an obscure and dusty part of the Roman empire?
And again, after prayer
and wrestling with it, he finds the answer:
“Worship the Lord
your God, and serve only him.”
Let the riches and
power look after themselves;
the important thing was
to serve God.
If that is right, the
rest would follow.
And then the third
temptation.
The view from the
pinnacle of the Temple.
So high up.... by their
standards,
like the top of the
Canary Wharf tower would be to us.
"Go on then –
you're the Son of God,
aren't you?
Throw yourself down –
your God will protect
you!"
It's the Harry Potter
temptation again, I think –
the temptation to show
off, to use his powers like magic.
Yes, God would have
rescued him, but:
“Do not put the Lord
your God to the test.”
That's not what it's
about.
That would have been
showing off.
That would have been
misusing his divine powers for something rather spectacular.
You may remember that
Jesus was similarly tempted on the Cross,
he could have called
down the legions from heaven to rescue him.
But he chose not to.
It wasn't about
spectacular powers –
often, when Jesus did
miracles, he asked people not to tell anybody.
He didn't want to be
spectacular.
He'd learnt that his
mission was to the people of Israel,
probably even just the
people of Galilee –
and the occasional
outsider who needed him, like the Syro-Phoenician woman,
or the Roman centurion
–
and anything more than
that was up to his heavenly Father.
And, obviously, if the
"anything more" hadn't happened,
we wouldn't be here
this morning!
But, at the time, that
wasn't Jesus' business.
His business, as he
told us, was to do the work of his Father in Heaven –
and that work, for now,
was to be an itinerant preacher and healer, but not trying
deliberately to call attention to himself.
In the world of Harry
Potter, magic is sometimes used for personal comfort and to save time
–
look at Mrs Weasley
cooking by magic,
or Fred and George
teasing Ron and Harry because they have to prepare the Christmas
Brussels sprouts the way we do, using a knife,
instead of just being
able to wave their wands at them.
And Harry, on his 17th
birthday, using magic to fetch his spectacles from the bedside table
just because he could!
Jesus wasn't like that.
His powers weren't to
be used to save him discomfort, or even death.
They were only to be
used at God's command,
to heal the sick,
raise the dead,
and cast out demons.
There were no short
cuts.
He had to go to the
Cross,
to walk the way of
Calvary,
to be put to death.
Mind you, in the very
end, so did Harry, of course.
You remember how he has
to die,
and then has the choice
whether or not to go back and save his world.
He had to die first,
though.
He is a picture of
Christ, dying for his world to be saved.
Rather like Aslan in
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.
But in our world,
unlike in Harry’s,
there simply aren't any
short-cuts.
Jesus couldn't use his
powers for his own glory, his own comfort,
and certainly not to
save his own life.
And we can't, either.
And I don't know about
you, but sometimes I find the traditional things preachers tend to
say about this story rather irritating.
They point out that
temptation does go away if you don't give into it,
and that help is
available to help us resist.
Well, yes –
if it's something like
an addiction –
been there, done that,
when I was giving up smoking,
and I know I couldn't
possibly have done that without God's help.
And if there is time,
we can often decide that we won't do whatever it is we are being
tempted to do, whatever it is.
But far too often, the
temptation to do or say the wrong thing happens so quickly,
there simply isn't
time!
before you know it,
you've snapped at someone,
or you've got engrossed
in something at work and missed the train you'd earlier promised to
catch.
Or whatever.
I'm not quite sure what
you're supposed to do then....
except know that God
does change us, slowly,
as we walk more and
more in His way,
as we get more and more
used to being His person all the time,
not just on Sundays or
whenever we happen to think about.
I have often said that
it doesn't matter much what Lenten discipline you chose as long as it
is something to help you come nearer to Jesus,
to become more Jesus'
person.
Perhaps you will be
coming to the Lent study groups tonight, and other Sunday evenings in
Lent.
One friend has been
challenged to spend ten minutes a day, just ten minutes, in God's
presence –
not praying, not
confessing her sins or thanking God for anything, just sitting
quietly in God's presence.
I read an article which
suggested that perhaps someone suffering from anorexia should be
challenged to eat chocolate every day.
This season of Lent is
about becoming more and more Jesus' person.
We aren't required to
be perfect –
although when we do
mess up, we're required to try to put things right as far as
possible.
But we are expected to
be open to being made more and more perfect!
Jesus was tempted in
ways that we may not be.
He was enabled to
resist, not because he was divine, but because he trusted God.
We are all tempted, we
all have our own weak spots.
Mine are different to
yours, but I have them, and so do you.
But with God's help we
can fight them,
we can gradually gain
ground over them.
And as we learn to
trust God more an more, so we can gradually gain more and more ground
over them.
And Lent is a terrific
time to increase our spiritual discipline to help us do just that.
Amen.