Loved and empowered
One day a
boy went out with his friends – before leaving the house his father had warned
him not to go and swim in the canal. When the boy returned with a wet bathing
suit his father asked where he had been – the son confessed that he had been
swimming in the canal - "Didn't I tell you not to swim there?" asked
the father.
"Yes"
answered the boy. "Then why did you?" he asked.
"Well,
Dad," he explained, "I had my bathing suit with me and I couldn't
resist the temptation."
"Why
did you take your bathing suit with you?" he questioned.
"Well,
so I'd be prepared to swim, in case I was tempted ! " replied the boy.
Many people,
it seems, often prepare to fail – they prepare to live life expecting something less
than God would hope for from them… In fact, perhaps we all do that at times as
we settle for less either in our own lives or in the lives of those in our
community or the world as a whole than God would hope for… And in doing so, we forget the awesome, empowering and transforming nature of God...
Temptations
are all around us – the temptation to do something wrong, or not to do
something which would very definitely be right !
Our gospel
reading (Luke 4:1-13) reminds us of the temptations of Jesus. After he was
baptised Jesus went away to spend time alone to reflect on the work ahead of
him, and there in the wilderness he receives these temptations.
Firstly
there was the temptation of being fed. Sometimes when we read these passages
it’s easy to forget the reality of these situations – in the wilderness Jesus
could have been desperately hungry and so he was asked to turn a stone into a
loaf of bread. Next, he was shown and offered the kingdoms of the world. He was
being offered incredible power and authority, as if he didn’t have it already...
And thirdly Jesus was asked to show his own power by jumping from the pinnacle
of the Temple and being saved…
So what was
the problem ? Jesus could have done these things and yet he didn’t and the
reason was that the motivation would have been completely wrong…
Jesus may
have been hungry, but he didn’t need to prove himself to the devil. He needed
instead to stick to the words of scripture, ‘one does not live by bread alone’.
Sometimes the desire to take the easy route is one that challenges us all.
Sometimes the offer of making life easy is something that just seems to make
sense, but we constantly need to ask ourselves the question ‘Where is God ?’ in
what we are doing.
The bible
doesn’t say we can’t enjoy material things, but it does say we need to care for
others and think about what we’re doing and receiving and giving…
And what
about the temptation of inheriting the world with all the power and the
authority that came with it… Well, what use would that be for Jesus ? Poor, and
with a ministry that could only be exercised relatively locally at that time,
he still had the whole world in his hands – and he held, and he holds the world
not with a desire to exercise authority and power, but with compassion and
love…
Jesus had
the chance to lay out his own plan, to protect himself, to set up the society
he wanted, but to do so in the way that was being offered meant to deny his
very reason for being there…
And so it
seems an obvious choice for him, but how often do we actually face similar
dilemmas – to do what the world expects rather than what God wants, to let
what’s normal in society govern our thoughts and expectations and desires…
Jesus had
all the power and authority he wanted or needed – he would exercise it by
showing his love and his care, by offering people a message of hope and
salvation…
And today the church needs to have more confidence
to express not what the world expects but what God expects…
And when we
speak of the church, we’re not speaking of some huge institution. The Church is
us and we can be confident not in trying to conform to the world but in serving
God who confounds the expectations of the world.
Security in
the world isn’t found just in trying to seek peace between nations but in
sharing hope and love, and by truly seeking to recognise every person we meet
as someone born in the image of Christ himself. It’s not what society is
telling us at the moment – a society that too often says that to keep power we
need to protect ourselves from people that are different.
God’s
message is that the world is a family – that security isn’t found in seeking to
control others but by extending love and compassion… And there will be some,
maybe even here, who think that’s a bit of a woolly liberal sort of message, idealistic,
even simplistic – but actually, truly loving our neighbour whoever that
neighbour may be, and however difficult to love they may be, is one of the
hardest things we can ever do – but if we proclaim Jesus as a Saviour, it is a
non negotiable that we keep trying to do this in every circumstance….
And then the
third temptation – Jesus was asked to go to the very top of the Temple and jump
off and allow God to save him… Jesus never tried to prove himself by dramatic
miracles. He didn’t do deals with people. He didn’t take the chance to show off
and he knew he would never gain love from someone just by basically showing
off…
Sometimes we
try to do the dramatic things, sometimes we do them for the publicity we can
get, but what really changes lives are the things that touch them personally –
not the entertainment we provide, but the love we offer revealed through our
actions…
In this
season of Lent we think of the temptations we face in life, we think of what
we’re really doing to put God first in our lives, we think of those things that
we do when we think nobody’s looking or the thoughts we have that really aren’t
what God would want us to have, we think of our relationships with others…
And when we
think of these things we do so with some regret at times – because the truth is
we can always do more for God as we seek to be like Jesus.
But that
regret isn’t something that we need to be depressed about because I don’t think
that’s what God wants from us. Lent is a time of self discipline and sometimes
harsh reflection, but we live Lent as we live our whole lives, secure in the
knowledge of the unconditional love of God for us all.
In our old
testament reading from Deuteronomy (26:1-11) we are reminded of the promises of
God – promises that he always delivers… We hear of the wandering Aramean who
went to Egypt and was treated badly, living as what’s described in our reading
as an alien in a foreign land, but they cried out to God and he rescued them….
And this
passage offers us two great thoughts – firstly who are the wandering Arameans
amongst us today and how do we treat them ? Who are the aliens in our country
and what do we do for them ? And secondly we’re reminded of the incredible love
of God who takes people into his care, who delivers on his promises… We think
of the God who has indeed brought us to a land of milk and honey, a land of
abundance, not only materially but spiritually as we recognise his blessings
day by day…
And in
Paul’s letter to the Romans (10:8b-13) he reminds us that God doesn’t actually
expect a lot from us – but he offers everything. ‘Confess with your lips that
Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, and
you will be saved’, whoever you are…
And so I
return to the boy swimming in the canal – the boy who prepared to fail – and
wonder, what are we making excuses for in our lives ? Where do we think we’re
not good enough or able enough ? Which neighbour do we think it’s ok not to
love because they really aren’t very nice ? Where are we preparing to fail to
live as Jesus wants us to live ? When was the last time we truly sought God and
his will for us in prayer or in the reading of our bibles ?
God doesn’t
want our excuses, he wants our lives…. He wants us to seek his help and his
guidance and his power to be the people he wants us to be…
Jesus never
went into the wilderness just to be tormented and tested, but he went to gain
strength and power. He undertook the trials of the temptation to come out ready
for ministry….
As we go
through Lent this year may we not seek the easy options but seek to do the things
and be the people that God wants so that, when we come to rejoice in the
celebration of Easter we will be more equipped for the ministry that we all
have - knowing we are loved and loving
and serving God and our neighbour whoever that neighbour may be. AMEN
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