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Sunday, February 14, 2016

The Power of the Holy Spirit

1LentC, Sullivan Park Care Center, February 14, 2016 by Annette Fricke
            Some people looking at this gospel text would focus in on the devil and all the questions he asks of Jesus.  Of what purpose is this story that is also included in other gospels?  I look at the bookends of the story.  In both the beginning and the end we find that Jesus is filled with the Holy Spirit.  We see it in verse 1 and in the verse following this section, verse 14.  Prior to this story in chapter 3 where we heard the account of Jesus’ baptism, we know that Jesus is there also filled with the Holy Spirit.
            We too, are promised the Holy Spirit when baptized in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  Like Jesus, we also have what could be termed “wilderness experiences.”  Although each of us has our own struggles with temptation throughout life, like Jesus, unlike Jesus we seem unable to resist temptation.  We start early in life.  I recall a time when Mom and Dad were away somewhere and my little brother and I stayed home.  Deciding that we should do something, we made chocolate chip cookies and popcorn. We always made popcorn in the cast iron pan, so I figured I must have been about thirteen to handle the pan.  Upon Mom and Dad’s return, we didn’t feel so good.  I guess we were testing the wisdom told us about spoiling our dinner by eating too many sweets.  Then there were times when we wanted to stay up till midnight just to see the New Year come in.  My parents had always gone to bed before midnight.  I guess it wasn’t any fun for them.  We didn’t see anything wrong with that practice because it was fun for us. It was also a challenge to stay awake that long because we never thought of it as losing sleep and it possibly being difficult to get up in the morning.  And that is where temptation crossed the line into submission.  We had submitted to our inclination to rebel against discipline. We had then given ourselves over to our fantasies that we somehow thought were better choices when in fact, they probably weren’t.  We didn’t understand the folly of our decisions until we had to face the consequences. What would have happened if Jesus had given in to temptation?  For one, he would be too much like us.
            Later in life, there are choices about whom to marry, what sort of job to work at, how to manage your money, what to invest in.  Yet even with the morally right choices, things still have the possibility of not turning out so well.  Those who invested in the stock market did well, but then it crashed.  My grandmother distrusted banks or so I was told by Mom. Sometimes the best way to do something is with all the patience and determination to robotically do each step in order, being careful to do not only as the job demands, but with the best of intensions.  I can intend to do the right thing in every situation, but unless I do it with my whole heart and attention, I can easily go astray in another direction.  I can follow the path to fickleness or stay on the road that is one of self-sacrifice, to go after my own wants as opposed to helping others. 
Lent is a time when many people focus on what they want to give up, usually it is something we deemed to be self-damaging.  The “giving up” list is usually comprised of things we personally consider to be bad habits.  For example, I may elect to give up chocolate or lose weight.  One episode in the series, “Vicar of Dibley” depicts a church council meeting at the beginning of Lent when each of the members attempts to extinguish their not so desirable behaviors.  One is to quit swearing, another to quit making nasty food, still another to give up chocolate. They quickly learn that it is easy at first, but as time wears on, it becomes more and more difficult to quit long established habits. There’s a new idea floating around in which a person puts one item each day of Lent into a garbage bag.  The excessive items in ones closet are items are to be identified as either trash or to be given to another person or a thrift store.  It sounds simple and I am sure that in the process, someone may benefit; either yourself or another.  But does this truly make sense?  What if we look at this from another perspective?  Instead of taking away something, what if we added something?  What if we spent time looking at how we display the grace of God?  What if we could break out of our usual comfortable circle of friends?  Could we work together in our little social groups to pool our talents, gifts, and resources to form a new alliance with people we don’t really know? It seems that we can go wrong with keeping to our little groups and associating only with the people we know.  How can we support each other, even those we don’t know well? How can we seriously and consistently engage in our baptismal promise to make disciples?  We all need reminders of what Christianity is all about and others to pull us back from our wanderings in our own wildernesses. We should be looking intently at how we can strengthen each other in our spiritual journeys.
            Is this gospel text in Luke about temptation or is it rather about the faithfulness and determination of God to make all things right for all people?  We are all tempted to do many things, but how many times do we give in and do that which we might not do if someone was there to help us resist?  Isn’t that really what the function of the Holy Spirit is for Jesus?  We can be just like children whose parents are out of town.  We can be doing things that could potentially cause us harm or worse yet, causing others harm.  We can become just the opposite of a person who is obedient to the will of God.  The Hippocratic Oath of a doctor is a good place to start.  Doctors promise to do no harm, but that isn’t enough if you really want to realize your potential to be the best doctor of which you’re capable.  That isn’t enough to really live the Christian life.  That is the bare minimum if you really want to follow Jesus into the wilderness. Yes, do no harm, but also do well.  Do well, and do one step better, do your very best.  We should strive to be emulated, not tolerated.  We should show love where others respond with hate or indifference.  Jesus is faithful to God with all that he says, all that he teaches, and all that he does.  Jesus is our ultimate model.  There is no better example of how to live a human life. We should be saying to the person on the street, “Look at what Jesus does in the face of temptation. Let’s be like Jesus.” 

            But when things fail, like your body when it pops and grinds and your skin when it starts to become thin, when bruising and soreness are more common than not, remember this: even though you are dust and to dust you shall return, God still loves you and will never forsake you.  God will never deceive you or point you in the wrong direction.  God will never fail no matter what happens.  God will give you the strength to get through.  God’s grace is sufficient. Amen.

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