Temptation and Loyalty
Tony E Dillon Hansen
Sermon based upon Matthew 4: 1-11, Genesis 2:15-17, 3:1-7, Psalm 32
Opening prayer
When we go about our daily lives, it is a rare bird that intentionally wakes up and says, “I want to be a bad person.”
Our familiar lesson at the outset of Lent looks at temptations. I think it is more than giving up something or fasting (especially since Jesus in Matthew 6 reminds us to put our heart in our practice.)
What is temptation? What causes us to go off the good way or walk away from God.
This is more than sugar fixes that some give up for Lent, but it’s about the feeling - an inclination to do something. In those moments, there are questions - should I?
Consider, where you lean for guidance. From where do we find understanding and perhaps “epiphany” what what we should do?
We enter Lent, but when facing difficult or tough questions, where do you lean, where is your loyalty?
This story isn’t really about those sugar craves as much as when someone introduces “false values to achieve outcomes.”
For us, consider what we substitute for what we need, or our community, or what God wants.
On most accounts, most people won’t know the difference and won’t even lift an eyebrow at the mostly quiet personal exchanges, but there is something more sinister here at play.
This isn’t just a “white lie” (like somehow painting lies white makes them less trickery.) This isn’t dripping lips over chocolate. Besides, we all know that one lie leads to another and to another until all falls down.
This is sinister - something shiny but underneath, it’s “decaying and empty.”
We pause. Is this really what you want?
Do I want that which corrupts - that which is not about community, justice and not about God, but instead about ego, injustice and selfish wants. (I get whatever I want - you fend for yourself.)
How did we not notice the pig with lipstick is just that (who made that a good idea?)
The temptation is to find comfort in something or being that says all the right things, but something is missing. We feel off when an offer seems “too good to be true.” It probably is.
Think how often decisions have absolute clarity or we get going along and something shows up that makes us take pause - examine whether current path is correct.
And if all we do is consume without consideration and do not give back, what legacy is our path but gluttony.
This is especially when we wrestle with it and with God, like Jacob did (Genesis 32). What did God do for Jacob, they wrestled. Ultimately, God shows up, works it out with us, and God blesses.
When we are at wits-end and not sure what to do, where do we turn attention? How do we react? Do we turn to seductive temptations or do we lean into our faith, into the way of Jesus?
Do we turn our heads away from the right thing to do because that’s too involved, or be someone’s desperately needed face of God here on this Earth?
Some people see others’ misfortune thinking “shadenfruede” (German for relishing in someone’s misfortune) and do nothing more.
Remember “crap” happens to all alike. Then, we realize someday in the garden of God and notice that we are naked too. God’s justice is naked truth because humans do mistakes - or just don’t do the right things.
Of that, there is this other character in the story. When we screw up and fail, people have tendency to look around for someone one or something to blame. Why do we need to do this and why invent a sneaky character lurking to spoil our deeds?
Consider football, I am sure the players heard some sneaky character say, just before the play starts, “hey could you, maybe, just drop the ball for me. That would be swell and I will make your name last forever.” The player responds in that instance - great idea! Can you imagine the conversation in the huddle afterwards?
No. When mistakes happen (and they do), it is for us to fess up, own it, learn from it (hopefully not to do it again.)
Unlike football coaches or otherwise, God gives us multiple chances, and thankfully so. We have a forgiving God, and “happy are those whose transgressions are forgiven.” (Psalm 32)
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Is Jesus questioning - trying to put things into context. (What is to come, the potentials - both good and ugly)?
This is us - you and me - at our finest.
Decisions before us, choices we have, appear to be long, questionable endurance, and the path to the promise is through that undefined field.
But wait! There is another seductive way. We could quit saying, “I don’t have faith in the promise. I don’t have faith that doing the correct thing will be rewarding.”
I want simple assurances “yes I will be happy.” Consider, simple answers to complex questions: really? Life is complex, and justice - the realm of God (on Earth) needs our help. We want simple answers, but God doesn’t work that way, the way of Jesus doesn’t work like that.
The path to eternal life, the way of Jesus, the way of God is long and requires sacrifice and endurance. It requires us to do church and to be justice, especially when there is a vacuum. This way, this path, does not mean we live vanquished of nice things or in total poverty, but that we recognize that we fall short.
This way of Jesus calls us to pay attention to the Spirit, to the community around us as well to be face and comfort of God to all God’s people.
That aint easy at 5:00pm (when after a full day of work), when I need to prep for tomorrow’s exam, or when I want to go fishing with the buddies. When our child needs help, what do we say? When our neighbor needs food or asks for justice, what do we do? When political figures want to disregard neighbors (don’t listen to them, don’t even associate - in fact, let’s put them in prisons or “special camps”), that is when we have to dig into our faith and decide our loyalty with God is stronger.
When we listen to God speaking, then the true, good path will be revealed. It may not come with instant satisfaction, but reward you will have when you let faith in God work.
The question is really: where does your loyalty lay? Perhaps easy answer when things are good or when we want to say the right thing. When things are getting difficult, when we have questions, when we thought we have done all that we needed to do, even though justice in our world still needs help, then we have to dig into faith, faith in the promise (way of Jesus), and turn our loyalty to God.
When we do, If we leave it all out on the table and let God help us, we can grow along the long, winding, and endurance way. “Bread” that nourishes us will be there, and there will be good people to help us along the way.
Most of all, Beloved, God will help us find that purpose and meaning along that journey.
That Beloved is …
Thanks Be to God.