The Third Temptation
“If you are the son of God throw yourself
down…” Lk.4.9
The tactics that the devil uses to
tempt Jesus are very subtle and looks very innocent. The first temptation is
not so much to provide oneself with bread but placing a kind of doubt in the
mind of Jesus, “If you are the Son God, command these stones to become bread.”
Devil knows that Jesus is strong and will not jump in to satisfy his carnal
desires by providing himself with bread. Even before he attempted, the devil
knew that he would fail, so he had a second strategy ready.
This time, it is an invitation not to
satisfy his carnal desires, but to satisfy what every human being aspires for -
the desire for recognition, status, glory, power, and money, “To you I will
give glory... authority… power and splendour .... if you worship me.” The devil
was sure he would succeed with one of these two temptations, as he often does
with the majority of people. But not with Jesus; he has not come to seek glory
and power and money.
The devil has a third strategy ready up
his sleeves, in case he failed in the first two. This time, he knows well,
there is no use baiting Christ with physical or mental satisfactions. In the
third temptation, there is no personal gain involved, there is no question of
bread or glory or power. There is nothing gained by jumping down from the
temple. In the process, he may lose his life, but then, if he has a Father, as
he claims, he will not allow that to happen. The third temptation is a test of
his sonship, whether he is the Son of a caring Father. If he has one, he will
protect him and will not allow any harm to come to him, for death, destruction,
pain and sorrow are incompatible with a loving Father. So the devil suggests to
test out whether he is truly the Son of a Father.
The Pharisees asked Jesus for a sign.
Jesus too, is tempted to ask for a sign. His third temptation is not to take
things for granted but to test out the care and concern of his Father for him.
Satan would come again with a similar proposal when Jesus was on the Cross, “Let the Messiah come down from the Cross” (Mk
15.32) Jesus did not jump down from the
temple nor did he come down from the Cross. His love for his father was not on
test. He needed no sign, no guarantee. The devil tried his best to argue that pain
and suffering, death and hunger, poverty and humility are contrary to his Father’s
love for him. Jesus did not need a
certificate from the devil about his Father’s love for him. He was not going to
put his Father to the test, and he told the devil in no uncertain terms to get out
of his way.
What are our temptations today? The
devil in all probability, will not come to us proposing to us to eat more bread
or drink more wine. He knows we avoid the ways of gluttony. If he fails, he
will try and propose to us with ways of making more money, finding
recognition, glory, and power. This is
one of the most successful strategies of the devil. Many fall victim to this
temptation, including some of those who were successful in the first. In all
probability, the devil will come to us the way he came to Jesus in the third
temptation. He will very subtly tell us that perhaps we are in the wrong place,
doing the wrong job; it is not the Father’s will that we should be where we
are, it is politics, manipulations that have brought us to where we are. With this
background prepared he will tell us just to test and see if we have a caring Father.
He will invite us to ask for a sign.
Don’t be too sure that we are not
falling into this third temptation. This temptation comes at times neatly
packed as even service to God, something that we must do, not just for
ourselves but for the success of our God-given mission. We can fall prey to
this temptation as individuals and as a group. He will prompt us that we need
to make money to help the poor, that we must make provision for our future and
to move towards self-sufficiency in our mission. These suggestions may well be
camouflaged temptations from the devil. He will tell us that these measures are
needed to be at the service of God’s people; it is a necessity and a prudent
measure for the success of our mission. The tempter may quote even the Bible
and give high moral arguments like, ‘God helps those who help themselves.’
The third temptation is basically a
temptation about our identity. Who are we? Who has sent us? What is our mission? What
are our priorities? Our pride, our show of strength, our overconfidence, our overconcern
for providing for the future, our guarantee projects are all signs of our
identity crisis. It is a lack of faith in the one who sent us. We are saved by
God, by Faith, and by Providence and not by our Babel towers, our guarantee
projects, our godowns, and our showrooms. Let us pray to the Lord that we may
not fall prey to this Third Temptation. - Fr T.V.George sdb
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