“Afterward, the Holy Spirit led Jesus into the lonely wilderness in order to reveal his strength against the accuser by going through the ordeal of testing.” Matthew 4:1 (TPT)
Jesus had just spent 40 days in a desert wilderness where he’d experienced total isolation from all human interaction, food, water, creature comforts, safety, etc. It’s not surprising when Scripture says that at the end of this time, Jesus was extremely hungry. And if that wasn’t horrible enough, this isolation (and deprivation) was followed by Satan’s attempts to manipulate and use Jesus for his own purposes and pleasures. He swooped in during Jesus’ vulnerable condition with three “offers” that both questioned Jesus’ identity and his ability to live up to his identity. As he goaded Jesus towards falling into his traps, Satan’s disrespect and loathing for Jesus were apparent. However, Jesus didn’t succumb to the goading. He turned Satan’s yearning attempts for power into a demonstration of his own real power. I can only imagine how jealous Satan must have felt, as well as, humiliated and furious!
My question in all of this is, “Why?” Why was it necessary for Jesus to experience these traumas in the first place, let alone for what must have felt like an unending amount of time. I find the answer in The Passion Translation of the above verse: “in order to reveal his strength against the accuser”. The purpose of this testing was to reveal to Jesus the power that already dwelt within him; what it was, how it felt, and how to draw upon and use it properly and appropriately at all times. Jesus needed to know these things before he could really begin to do the work that he’d been sent to do. This horrible test was not only a preparation, but also a purification for his role as Messiah. We’ve all heard that absolute power corrupts absolutely, and the man Jesus could have fallen prey to this truth just the same as the rest of us. I have no doubt that Jesus could have zapped Satan right then and there; he may have even done so had Satan accosted him prior to experiencing this test. Satan was (and still is) a master manipulator, and Jesus needed the knowledge and confidence that this experience would provide — knowledge and confidence in his ability to beat Satan at his games while always remaining true to himself, to his nature and to his desired purposes. He had to know how to wield power with love.
This kind of testing is common to all of humanity. I’ve experienced many tests of this kind — hard, dark times that felt as if they would never end. As I look back over these times now, I can see that the answer to my question of “Why?” is no different. Each experience has revealed more of my true nature to me, and shown me the real choices that I have before me. I’ve been given the opportunity to observe and acknowledge the pitfalls of my faults (and neuroses) and to explore new ways of thinking, feeling, and responding to the life that I was living. I’ve been given the time to see what needs to change in order for me to have the new life that I long to live. I’ve also had my strengths and inward beauty revealed to me as things that I can draw upon and use to serve myself and others well. It truly sucks that this kind of growth and refinement only seem to come as a result of leaning into and embracing times of isolation, deprivation and pain, but that does seem to be the case. These horrible tests have always had a purpose that is good, for myself and for everyone around me, because they have moved me closer and closer to the purest form of my true self — the only self that can glorify God.
Perhaps our current pandemic situation finds you experiencing a similar time of testing. It has been so for me. As I continue to wait for the pandemic to end, I hear God say to me: “Welcome this test and take it seriously. Much change for the good can come from it, for you and for all of humanity. Embrace this test as a friend, and trust me to bring you one step closer to all that you are meant to be in my love.”
Amen!
I love the perspective you have about the hard times. I always thought that God was transforming me during those hard places. But now I am thinking that He is but bringing out of me that which already resides in me (Christ alive). I like to think about it that. I love the Passion Translation. xo p
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Insightful…will continue to ponder…
assuring invitation…thank you for sharing…
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Thank you for sharing this insight!! Quite interesting to consider the strength within us.
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