March 6, 2022
Luke
4.1-13
+ So, here we are in Lent.
Strange, bizarre Lent.
And it really is strange and bizarre.
There is nothing quite like Lent.
It’s so different than the rest of the Church year, for me anyway.
Because, what we’re forced to do in Lent is do something I don’t
like doing sometimes.
I don’t like talking about fasting or confession or giving up
something for Lent.
I don’t like preaching about sin.
No, what Lent forces me to do that I don’t really want to do is:
look in the mirror.
And not just look—but really look—honestly, bluntly—in the spiritual
mirror.
That is not fun to do.
It is not a pleasant experience to look at ourselves honestly and
bluntly in the mirror.
It is not fun to confront ourselves.
It’s probably easier for most of us to confront the Devil—however
we might view this personification of evil—in our own lives.
But, if you notice in our Gospel reading for today, that
three-fold commandment of Jesus is all about looking in the mirror and
confronting ourselves.
We find Jesus repudiating the Devil’s temptations with some
strongly worded quotes from Scripture:
“One does not live by bread alone”
“Worship the Lord your God, and serve only [God]”
and
“Do not put the Lord your God to the test.”
When we look at them, these commandments are really all about us.
About me—the ego.
That’s an issue for all of us.
The Devil becomes this almost peripheral character in our reading,
if you notice.
He’s kind of like a whispering shadow at the edge of the story.
The main characters of this story are, of course, Jesus. And us.
So, in our Gospel reading, we hear first that we do not live by
bread alone.
Looking in that spiritual mirror, looking at ourselves, we find
that, yes, honestly, we’ve had too much bread—too many carbs—too much of
everything.
This season of Lent is the prime time for us to look long and hard
at our eating practices.
For the most people, we simply eat without giving a second thought
to what we’re eating or why we’re eating it.
And this goes for drinking too.
Certainly we have doctors who tell us that this is one of the
leading causes of a good many of our health problems in this country.
Nutrition. Food. And too much food. And too much bad food.
No, this is not going to be a vegan sermon. There’s bad vegan food
too.
When we realize how high the rate of obesity and related illnesses
are, we know that food really is a major factor in our lives.
When we look at issues like obesity and eating disorders and
alcoholism and all kinds of addictions, we realize that there is often a
psychological reason for our abuse of food or alcohol.
We do eat and drink for comfort.
We do eat physically or partake of other things thinking that it
will sustain us emotionally.
We put food or drink into that place in which God should suffice.
A time of fasting is a time for us to break that habit and to
nudge ourselves into realizing that what should be sustaining us spiritually is
the spiritual food—that bread of angels—we receive from God.
Then, we hear “Worship the Lord your God, and serve only [God].”
Here again is a major temptation for us.
Let’s face it, for us: the world revolves around us.
Around me.
And one of the sources of our greatest unhappiness is when we
realize others don’t feel that way.
We want people to notice us, to like us.
We want to be needed and valuable.
Ideally, we would like to have people fall at our feet and adore
us.
We have all thought about what it would be like to be
noticed—truly noticed—when we enter a room, like a movie star at the Oscar’s.
OK. Maybe that’s a bit extreme.
But, just think about it for a moment.
Look at how we feel when we send an email—and there’s no response.
Or when we post something meaningful on Facebook—and we only a get
a few likes.
I hate that!
I want lots of likes for the things I post.
But, it’s not about others.
That’s all about me and my ego.
And I’m the only one angry or frustrated at the end of it all.
And I put myself in this position.
Yes, I might be mad at others, but it’s ultimately MY fault for
feeling this way.
We are all susceptible to self-centeredness, to that charming
belief that the world revolves me—the individual.
That, we believe, will make us truly happy.
If we can be fully accepted, fully loved and appreciated.
But Jesus again nudges us away from that strange form of
self-idolatry and reminds us that there is actually someone who knows us better
than we know ourselves, who knows our thoughts better than we do.
We are truly loved, truly accepted, truly appreciated—by God.
And we shouldn’t worry about the rest.
Rather than falling to the self-delusion of believing our world
revolve around ourselves, we must center our lives squarely and surely on God.
Finally, we are warned not to put the Lord our God to the test.
We’ve all done this as well.
We have railed at God and shaken our fists at God and bargained
with God.
We have promised things to God we have no intention of truly
keeping.
We have all said to God, “If you do this for me, I promise I will
[insert promise here].”
Again, like all the previous temptations, this one also revolves
around self-centeredness and selfishness.
This one involves us controlling God, making God do what we want God
to do.
This one involves us treating God like a magic genie or a wishing
pond.
I’ve done this.
I’ve been here.
I’ve shaken that fist at God and railed loudly at God.
The realization we must take away from this final temptation is
that, yes, God always answers our prayers.
But the answer is not always what we want.
Sometimes, it’s yes.
Sometimes it’s no.
Sometimes it’s not yet.
All three of those are answers to prayer.
But what we fail to realize in all of this is that those moments
in which God does grant us the answer to prayer in the way we wanted, it is
only purely out of God’s goodness and God’s care for the larger outcome.
It has nothing to do what we do.
We cannot manipulate God and make God do what we want.
None of us are in the position to do that.
And if we had a God that could do that—that could be so easily manipulated--I’m
not certain I would truly want to serve that God.
These are the temptations we should be pondering during this
Lenten season.
When I said earlier that these confessions of Jesus are the basis
for our understanding of Lent, they really are.
Each of these statements by Jesus are essentially jumping off
points for us as we ponder our relationship with God, with each other and with
ourselves during this season.
What Jesus experienced in that desert, we too experience this
Lent—and at many other times in our lives.
The confrontation with the Devil in the desert, is often a
confrontation with ourselves in the mirror.
It is a confrontation with that difficult and dark side of
ourselves—that gossipy, self-centered, controlling, manipulative person we
sometimes are.
These ego-centric behaviors really don’t promote our egos.
They actually hurt our egos in the long-run.
Yes, we might have full stomachs, Yes, we might be loved and
appreciated and accepted, yes, we would have a fairy-godmother-god who grants
all our wishes—but we would not ultimately be very happy.
We would still want more and more.
But, in our core of cores—in our very spirits—we would still be
incomplete and unfulfilled.
But I also don’t want to just brush the Devil off here.
Our Gospel reading today is important for one other aspect of Lent
that is uncomfortable.
It is confronting the Devil.
We are also called to confront the devil during this Lenten
season.
Now, I’m not talking about the little red horned creature with the
forked tail.
I am talking about the ways in which the “Devil” confronts us.
We are confronted by the Devil when others bully us and push us around
and abuse us and hurt us.
We all have had them.
Bullies.
Mean-spirited people who truly want to do us harm.
Sometimes they are strangers.
Sometimes they are the “Karens” and “Kevins” in the parking lot or
the retauarnt.
Sometimes they are spouses, or family members.
Sometimes they are “friends.”
Sometimes they are bosses.
Sometimes they are clergy.
And sometimes they are Bishops.
Sometimes it is the despotic President of a country who invades another
country for their ego trip.
And sometimes it is not just the Devil, but those who have allowed
the Devil to do the Devil’s work—those complacent followers of these people who
have allowed evil to go on and persist.
Or to call the Devil a “genius” (as one of our former Presidents
did just recently)
When we are confronted by the Devil, we must resist.
We must stand up and say no.
And we must expose the Devil’s antics.
The last thing we should do is simply roll over and present our
tummies to the Devil like obedient puppies.
When we do that—when we roll over, when we come crawling back
after being abused and mistreated, attempting a one-sided reconciliation—we are
only giving more power to the Devil.
It is our job as Christians, as followers of Jesus, to resist the
Devil again and again and again, whenever we confront evil in this world and in
our lives.
It is our job to stand up and say “No!” to the Anti-Christ—to that
personification of anything that is truly anti-Jesus in this world.
This is also a very important part of our Lenten journey—and our
journey in following Jesus.
At some point during Lent, our job is to stop gazing in the
mirror—to stop gazing longingly at ourselves— and to turn toward God.
Our job is to recognize this God who does truly grant us
everything we really need and want, just maybe not in the way WE think those
things should be given to us.
It is for that realization that we should be thankful during this season of Lent.
So, let us, when we emerge from the desert with Jesus, do so
re-focused—not on ourselves, but on the God who truly does provide us with
everything we need in this life, and the life to come.
Let us pray.
Holy
and loving God, be with us in the deserts of our lives. Send your angels to us
in times of need. Feed us with what we need and nourish us with your bread. And
help us to in turn be angels to those who need them, and feed those who hunger.
In Jesus’ Name, we pray. Amen.
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