Intro
Such a generous offer the Devil makes, proposing to share the stage of God with 
Jesus Christ.  The Devil can be such a charmer, offering our Lord bread, glory, 
and sparing Him the suffering yet to come.  Why?  So we will be without our 
Savior’s Word.

Main Body
The Deceiver whispers, “You don’t need to do this, this isn’t Your fault.  
These stones lie before You, fit for some blessed purpose.  These stones can 
become nourishment for Your hungering belly, beautiful to the eye and pleasing 
for food.  Give Yourself a break, enjoy the benefits of being the Creator, and 
allow me the pleasure of the people.  Never need they trouble you again with 
their grievances and complaining.” 

The Suffering Servant, Jesus, allows Satan a hearing, but unlike those who came 
before, He does what they did not—He resists.  Yes, temptation comes, but He 
overcomes.  For our Savior does not succumb to corruption.  No, He suffers, 
obeying when they disobeyed, living by the Word going forth from His mouth. 

The Son will wait while the Father provides.  Led into this time of temptation, 
He places Himself under God, knowing deprivation and disgrace.  The Father 
provides for Him, not by taking away the burden, but by offering Him up for our 
every failure! 

Without a grievance, the Savior goes.  Without food, honor, and abandoned, He 
goes.  Later, this Messiah will lumber, bearing the beam of wood to pay for our 
wrongs.  So, He turns the other cheek and allows others to force a crown of 
thorns on His head, to drive nails into His hands and feet.  The Diabolical One 
does his worst, claims his day, demands his price, and believes he prevails in 
triumph as Jesus gasps His final breath.

Oh, how un-crafty the Evil One is, for Jesus outfoxes the fox.  The world’s 
Redeemer pays the ransom to God’s Law, completing the sacrifice through what 
seems as defeat.  The Savior loves us to the end—bleeding Himself dry of life, 
Spirit, and blood.  

The Devil orchestrates this from afar, leaping and cavorting at the death of 
the One promised, prophesied long ago when we plummeted into sin.  The Seed of 
Eve foretold to crush his head is now pale and lifeless before him.  Here Satan 
stands, the victor!

No so fast, for from the frailty of death comes the power of the Almighty, 
satisfying the Law’s demands.  In His sacrifice, our Lord removes the guilt and 
shame of the same.  In these markers of defeat, the One sacrificed crushes the 
strength of Satan, proclaims His triumph in the bastion of the Devil’s lair, 
and rises from death! 

Only Christ is the Conqueror over Satan in the desert, in Galilee, and on 
Golgotha.  Only He snatches victory from the clench of death, rising to a new 
day for us all.  Sturdier and stronger is He over the demonic foe. 

The power we hold contains strength to destroy and seek vengeance, not heal 
into eternity.  Not so with our Lord, for He is the Prince of Peace.  The 
Kingdom of heaven will suffer violence, and His rule is the reign of grace.  
Still, He is the greatest force in creation, revealing His strength in 
forgiveness.  By grace, with love, does He rule. 

All for His Kingdom, this Prince of Peace turns enemies into friends, declaring 
former rebels to be His beloved children.  In the cleansing, life-giving water, 
He washes them clean, poured out in the water flowing from His pierced side.   

The dream of Satan, to kill God, becomes real but proves to be too potent a 
draft for him to drink.  Freed from the Devil’s dishonor, our Lord welcomes 
failures, losers, and weaklings back into His fold!  The Father, the Son, and 
the Spirit love you forever.  

So, why do you live out your days in this wilderness?  In your disability, you 
experience hunger, shame, and attack by Satan.  Here’s why.  The student is not 
above his Teacher, and God chooses to hide His heroes in weakness and His 
saints in sinners.  Such is our Savior’s faith-requiring way, who hides 
something inside the opposite.  

To believe in the reverse of what we expect demands faith.  So, you follow the 
Savior in the Way of the Cross.  Not by food alone do you live, but by every 
Word going forth from the mouth of God.  The Word, Jesus, takes His Word to 
give you Himself.  How?  By hiding Himself behind what the world understands to 
be useless.

Think about what Jesus did.  In His incarnation, God becomes human—so He can 
die.  In death, He saves us to give us life.  Through what the world considers 
to be a waste, our Lord displays and gives His saving power.   

The Tempter approaches Jesus.  “So, if you are the Son of God, command these 
stones to become loaves of bread.”  The Savior’s response?  “Man must not live 
by bread alone but by every word coming from the mouth of God.”

Think about what Jesus does.  The Word from Jesus comes to us, giving us life.  
Mere words—and yet in them is eternal life.  With irony on top of irony, the 
Giver of Life speaks words from His mouth and takes bread, giving us life.  For 
He doesn’t give us bread alone, which would be useless, but delivers to us what 
His Word says.  “This is my body, given for you; this is my blood, shed for you 
for the forgiveness of sin.”

Where God acquits us of our wrongdoing, earned for us in His death, He delivers 
us His life and salvation.  Eternal Life hides within bread, grain crushed and 
cooked, to our eyes, lacking in life.  To believe Jesus gives You Himself in 
such a way demands faith.  For you must believe what He says instead of what 
your mind thinks can be true.

So, because of our Lord’s victory in death, you don’t go to slaughter.  For you 
don’t live by food alone but by what He speaks to you in His words—Himself, 
hidden in the loaf.  Only in Jesus, are you are holy, righteous, innocent, and 
without blame.  

Still, as you walk on your wilderness journey, you are not yet in the Promised 
Land.  The noble work begun in you is not yet complete.  So, you still suffer 
in this barren place full of evil and enticement, full of sorrow and death.  

Amid alluring attractions, God gives you His Word of life, from His mouth and 
into yours.  Not bread alone, for without God within, you do not receive enough 
to carry you into the life of eternity.  So, the Word made Flesh delivers 
Himself to you in the bread, joining you in the battle, providing what you 
need. 

Only your dead-and-risen Champion encourages, strengthens, and nourishes.  From 
His mouth into yours, and now from your mouth comes the Word He places within 
you.  Praise of His mercy, thankfulness for His kindness.  For in Him, you are 
clean.  In this pattern, our Redeemer provides us the pattern of worship, 
pleasing to Him.

The pastor holds a strange wafer of wheat before you: “The Body of Christ.”  By 
faith, you believe Jesus feeds you, not only with bread but with Himself, 
joining you to Himself.  To attend and serve you, He steps forth, here in this 
place, where He promises to be.  Yes, this is your Savior and how He wants you 
to recognize Him.

The Devil doesn’t understand the Savior, for he senses failure, not strength.  
In His strength hiding in weakness, in His compassion to save you, Jesus 
endures all.  In the desert, He hungers.  Later, trudging toward Golgotha, He 
takes whip and scourge—all for you.  For such is Your salvation—His 
incarnation, fasting, and temptation, His dying and rising—all to make you His. 

The Lord’s way is not the way of power and might.  For He is not like the 
self-created gods made in our image.  The Messiah’s way is not for you to obey 
well enough to make the cut, but forgiveness.  The goal of Christianity is not 
to force you to behave but forgiveness and salvation.  The promised Savior 
received and ate with sinners.  Is today any different? 

No secret strategies or tactics will stop you from sinning on this side of 
glory.  Of course, as Spirit-filled people, we do try to sin less often because 
of who we are, not to make ourselves worthy.  Still, you will mess up and hurt 
others you love.  The Christian faith is not a self-help program, but the way 
of God’s amnesty, mercy, and grace. 

So, you find yourself failing at who Christ declares you to be.  Why don’t you 
do what you want to do and not the evil you don’t?  The bookstores make much 
money from this dilemma, in an ever-growing, self-help section.  Still, no 
strange elixir wisps in the atmosphere, no secret formula or magic prayer.  The 
answer is this—Jesus loves you.

Yes, your Redeemer suffered for you, forgiving your sins, so they aren’t coming 
back.  On the Day He returns, all creation will experience the real you.  The 
fallen flesh will be forgotten, with a pure one in its place, and you will 
shine like the Son of the Father you are.  For you will be clothed with Christ, 
without corruption, well-pleasing to the Father.  

So, what you suffer now—sorrow, compulsions, and failure—are not worth 
comparing with the glory to come.  Do not the eyes of belief marvel at this 
panorama?  Yes, even the vast cloud of witnesses and angels surrounding you, 
encouraging you to press on.

With them, and with the multitude of heaven, you praise and proclaim the 
Almighty’s glorious name, the name of peace, into which He baptized you.  Sin 
is not defeated by the Law, by what you must do.  No, only by the Gospel does 
sin lie in defeat, by what Jesus did and does for you.

Conclusion
The Lord Jesus overcame temptation, which means you are His forgiven child, 
righteous, and holy.  So, come and eat the sacred Body and Blood of your Lord 
and Savior.  Be strong, not by your will or understanding, but by relying on 
the mercy and goodness of the Lord Jesus Christ.  In Him, all is well into 
eternity.  Amen.
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