Its an
important day for the church today as it celebrates 40th Friday. Jesus
fasted for forty days and at the end of the fast he was tempted by the devil.
On the 40th day of the Great Lent which is always a Friday, the church
commemorates the tempting of Jesus and his triumph over Satan.
For our
brief meditation let us turn our Bible’s to the Gospel portion
Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit
into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. Then the devil left him, and
behold, angels came and were ministering to him.
Matthew 4:1,11
The
traditional method used to catch monkeys is quite amusing. A bottle is taken
and something sweet is placed inside the bottle. The bottle is then tied to the
ground. Then when a monkey comes along and sees the sweet he places his hand
inside the bottle. But with the sweet enclosed in his palm his fist is too big
to get back out of the bottle. The monkey will pull and push in an effort to
get that sweet out, but he will not let it go, not even as those coming to
catch him approach. And the monkey is caught with his hand in the bottle.
In the
same way to be tempted or not depends on us. What we are clinging on to decides
whether we will fall prey to temptation or have victory over it.
Before
Jesus was tempted we see that Jesus spends forty days in fasting. Numbers have
always had a symbolic meaning in the Bible. Israelites spend forty years in the
wilderness. Symbolically it could mean that Jesus spent one day for each of the
forty years his nation Israel had spent in the wilderness.
There
is no doubt that wilderness is something none of us want to go through or be
in. The conditions are stark, desolate and barren. Does wilderness have
anything positive? The positive thing about wilderness is that it is never a
boring place because there is always action in the wilderness.
Wilderness
is always a battle scene. Here also we see it is a battle scene. There is a
struggle and Jesus shows how we can overcome this. The whole of our life time
is a wilderness journey as each day we too have to fight the battle with the
Spirit and the Devil.
When we
look at all the temptations Jesus faced and came out victorious, we see that it
is the victory over “if and then conditions” that we usually fall prey too.
Devil easily pulls us into wanting outcomes for our faith. All the three
temptations – If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become loaves
of bread (Mat. 4:3); If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down (Mat. 4:6)
and All these I will give you, if you will fall down and worship me. (Mat. 4.9)
I am
sure most of us have said, “God if you get me out of this then I will believe
you and trust you.” Jesus presents a life of faith that does not make faith
conditional on happy outcomes.
It is
easy to have faith in/to God when things are going our way and well. But when
there is unrest and things are not in order at our end, will we keep walking?
Will we still be faithful to God then?
For
Jesus the “word” was a lamp unto his feet (Psalm 119:105). The right
understanding and knowledge of the Scripture allowed Jesus to be on the right
track when tempted.
We all
fall prey to temptation each and every moment. Jesus victory over the
temptation provides hope for us that if we too take hold of the Word of God and
rely on the power of the Holy Spirit we too will be able to overcome any
temptation and any wilderness that we are driven into. Clinging on to the Word
is the answer to all our problems.
This
Lenten Season may we be cautious of the temptations in our daily lives from the
devil. The devil will not leave anyone as he has tempted our Lord God.
May God
help us in this journey. God Bless you.
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