Series C
Sugar
Cookies, Ice Cream and Popcorn
Lent
1 Luke 4:1-13
There was a
reception at the church, and therefore, a reception table. On that
reception table were several platefuls of cookies. My eyes glanced
over all the cookies on the reception table and then focused on the
plate of white, round, sugar cookies. I knew these cookies. They
were from the recipe of Lois Righi and Carol Ervin had made them. I
glanced at the people in the room and no one was looking, as I
popped one into my mouth and it quickly melted. These were the
cookies I remembered. I again glanced around and no one was looking,
so I popped five more of those cookies into my pocket and casually
walked to my study, closed the door behind me, and pulled out the
cookies. I was all alone with those cookies and slowly and happily
savored them one by one. What else could I have done? How does a
person resist such temptation?
That night after
work, I was tired and exhausted. When I am tired, exhausted and down
in the dumps after work at night, that is justification for eating a
large bowlful of ice cream when I get home. My wife wasn’t there
in the kitchen and so I was free to eat as much as I wanted at that
moment. I didn’t bother with the bowl, but just worked out of the
ice-cream box. What is one to do in such situations as these?
The next night when
I got home I was not tired, exhausted and depressed, but my wife had
made a large bowl of popcorn, and within minutes, I had consumed my
portion. Of course, not to hurt her feelings, I went back to the
larger, yellow plastic bowl and poured myself another large portion
of popcorn. And then a third. What is one to do when the buttered
popcorn smells so wonderfully in the kitchen and the aroma fills the
house? I am not suggesting it was my wife’s fault that I ate too
much, but she was the one who made the popcorn.
We all know about
sugar cookies, ice cream and popcorn. We all have had experiences
with these delicacies of life and they are indeed temptations for
us. These are part of the everyday trivial and not so trivial
temptations of our lives.
We know that
temptations are real and that temptations are an actual part of our
daily lives. Temptations are part of your real life and part of my
real life. Temptations are not theoretical, nor hypothetical nor
imaginary. Whether you believe in the devil or not, temptation is
real for you. Whether you believe Satan is real or not, your
struggles with temptation are real, and so are mine.
How we struggle.
How we struggle with temptation. How nice it would be if the primary
temptations of life had to do with sugar cookies, ice cream and
popcorn. But usually the struggles and temptations of life have not
to do with these, but with the gut issues of life such as
pride, greed, lust, gluttony, laziness, anger and envy. …
In tough times, we
are tempted not to believe in God. I remember when Old Man Lunde was
alive so many years ago. I remember him telling about the Depression
in the 1930s and the dust storms of North Dakota. I remember how Al
Lunde was broke and didn’t have a dime to his name. He, his wife
and kids moved out here to the Pacific Northwest, and Al’s face
stuck into my face, as his finger wagged at my eyes, “And where
was God in all of that?” Al was still mad at God for what happened
to him in the Depression. The years passed, and his wife, Cora,
ultimately had a stroke. As she came closer to death, Al was wrestling with loneliness
and depression. He was again angry with God and me and again wagged
his finger into my face, “How could a good God do something like
this to my wife, Cora?” … How nice it would be in the primary
temptations of life had to do with sugar cookies, ice cream and
popcorn, but the temptations of life have to do with the gut issues
of life such as the temptation not to believe in God. The temptation
not to believe that God knows your name. The temptation to not
believe that God counts the numbers of hairs on your head. The
temptation not to believe that God is good. The temptation to not
believe that God is not watching our every action and is close to
us.
The other
temptation is not to live the way God wants us his children to live.
The temptations of life vary for each one of us, yet we are all
addicted to sin. We are all experts at sin. Each of us in our varied
ways is an expert at sinning. … For some of you, the battle is
with the bottle. Alcoholism is a terrific temptation. Some of you
use booze to fill the hole in your soul…. For others of you, it is
sex and lust. Some of you are on the verge of having a sexual
relationship with someone outside of marriage. You may be having or
about to have an affair with somebody at work. For others of you,
you can’t handle your sexual fantasies and your use of erotic
stimulation for your imagination. … For still others of you, your
temptation comes in the form of pride and success. You want to climb
higher and higher and higher on the ladder. … For still others, it
is money and what money can buy. You want a fancier car, a fancier,
home, a fancier trip, a fancier lifestyle. …For still others, you
are drawn to unhealthy people and unhealthy relationships where the
person is abusive and destructive and you continue to live in an
abusive relationship and your temptation is that you think you
deserve such punishment. …Still others of you are tempted to live
life for yourself and ignore the elderly, ignore the poor, ignore
the people in prisons or jails. … Still others of you are tempted
to ignore your own children and even worse, to ignore your husband
or wife and not give them the quality of time and love they need.
… How nice it would be if the temptations of life had to do
primarily with sugar cookies, ice cream and popcorn. But the real
temptations of life have to do with the gut issues of life.
The gut issue of whether or not God does real know the numbers of
hairs on your head. The gut issue of whether or not you are living
in ways that are pleasing to God.
It is with this
mood that we approach the temptation story of Jesus for today. Jesus
was tempted and his temptations were not sham encounters. It was no
imaginary thing. It was no hypothetical situation. His temptations
were real, just as your and my temptations are real. His temptations
were not shadow boxing. They were not little make-believe exercises
that he went through. Nor was Jesus being tempted among a gallery of
spectators who were cheering him on. Like so many temptations, they
occurred when he was alone, for temptation is often a lonely
encounter. Temptation is often a solitary business. Jesus was alone
with his thoughts, alone with his dreams, alone with his desires,
alone with his fantasies, and he was tempted. Just as we are often
tempted when we are alone with our thoughts, our dreams, and our
fantasies. There in that situation, while alone, he was tempted.
Briefly, I would
like to take a look at the temptation story of Jesus and see what
happened to Jesus and see what the issues were for him. Perhaps we
can learn from the temptations that Jesus faced, so that we can deal
more effectively with our own temptations and struggles.
The first
temptation of Jesus was to convert stones into bread. Jesus
responded, “You cannot live by bread alone.”
There is always a
temptation to convert stones into the bread of life, to convert
material possessions into the primary sources of satisfaction. There
is this deep temptation to convert the breads of life, spelled with
a small letter, b, into the Bread of life, spelled with a capital
letter, B. We pray to ourselves, “If I only had more bread in my
pocket and fancier bread on my table, I would be happier.” So many
people buy into that illusion, that deception, that fundamental
deceit. The fundamental deceit is that if I have a little more money
or a little more material pleasure or a few more material things, then
I will be happier. What
an illusion. What a fantasy. What a deception.
You are perhaps
aware of the cross national studies that compared the lives of
people who live in Egypt and people who live in Germany. The
standard of living for people who live in Germany is four times
greater than those who live in Egypt. Logically, the Germans should
be four times as happy as the Egyptians. Is that true? You know it
is ludicrous. Germans are not happier. If you measure the happiness
quotient of Germans and Egyptians, they are about the same. It is an
illusion when we think that a little bit more money will make us
happier or will make our families happier. What a deception. What an
illusion.
You may be aware of
studies that compared the rich, the middle class and the lower
class. All three groups wanted a little bit more money and they
thought they would be happier. They wanted twenty-five percent more
and consequently, happier. The rich, middle class and lower class
all believed that a little bit more money would help them enjoy life
more. The lower class didn’t want to be middle class. The middle
class didn’t want to be upper class. The upper class didn’t want
to be filthy rich. They all wanted a little bit more money, so they
could then be happier. But the rich and the middle class weren’t
any happier than anyone. A little bit more money does not make you
any happier, although a lot of you believe it in the secrecy of your
hearts.
There is an epitaph
on a tomb that reads: “She died of things.” The next tomb said,
“He died providing things for her.”
As important as material things are, sooner or later, you
will realize that they cannot be at the core of your life and will
never satisfy the deepest needs within you.
This past week, I
presided at the funerals of two of our members, Irving Birk and
Harold Maresh, two of the great saints of our church. These were two
common and ordinary people in whom the love of Jesus lived. Irving
and Harold were two of the richest people I have ever met. They are
two of the wealthiest people I have ever known. Both of their
funerals were jammed with loving children, family, relatives,
friends, church members, neighbors, all friends. Both men lived in
very modest homes. Both had very modest accumulations of wealth.
Both drove older cars. And both died having a wealth of loving
relationships. They were the richest of all people. Their cache was
not spelled C-A-S-H, but their cache was the French spelling of the
word, C-A-C-H-E. They great cache, C A C H E, but meager capital. My
suspicion is that some of you still think that more capital results
in greater happiness. Well, you are wrong, and life will eventually
prove it to you. We are created in the image of God; we are created
to be like God. Because we are created in the image of God who is
love, when we find love or are loving, we find true joy and
happiness. It is absolute nonsense to think that material things and
material pleasures can satisfy the yearnings of our human lives. It
is a lie that material things satisfy deeply, but then, the devil is
a liar.
The second
temptation for Jesus was that he was taken up to the top of a temple
at Jerusalem, some one hundred and fifty feet high, and told to
throw himself down and he would force God’s hand and the angels in
heaven would catch him before he splattered on the earth. So would
you imagine Jesus up at the top of the Space Needle in downtown
Seattle? Jesus is on the top of the Space Needle and all the people
see him at the top. A large crowd is gathered below, like watching a
fire, and the sick crowd shouts, “Jump, jump, jump.” The devil
said to him, “Jump, jump, jump. You jump Jesus and as you are
falling, the angels of God will swoop by and pick you up and then
the entire then crowd below will believe that you are the Son of
God. Prove to the crowd that you are divine, and when you have
proven that you are divine, when you have proven that God exists, then
the crowd will follow you.”
… What sheer delusion. What hypocrisy. What foolishness. It
reminds me of the rock opera, JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR, when Pilate
said, “Jesus Christ, if you’re divine, turn my water into wine.
Jesus Christ, if you’re no fool, walk across my swimming pool.” Jesus, if you turn my water into wine and magically walk
across my swimming poor, then I will believe in you. Then, I will be
your disciple. Then I will know for sure that there is a God. Sheer
delusion. Sheer deception. People see miracles of God all the time,
and they still don’t believe in God or follow God. That happened
often in Biblical times and still happens today.
One of the greatest
temptations of life is to want God, is to need God to prove himself
to us. Show me a miracle and then I will believe and follow.
Dosteyevsky’s Grand Inquisitor said, “People seek not so much
God as the miraculous.” How foolish, asking for miracles when
God’s miracles are all around us, and we still don’t see them.
This morning, I
woke up and walked out to see the daffodils and then the primroses
and my eyes lifted up to see the morning sun dancing across Puget
Sound, and I said to myself, “Lord, this is not good enough. I
want a big miracle, God. The daffodil is not big enough. The
primrose is not big enough. The sun’s rays on the water are not
big enough. Show me a real miracle and then I will believe and
follow.” What an illusion. God gives us real miracles every day in
the daffodil, the primrose and the sunrise on the waters, and those
who have faith in God, see the miracles in the morning and they
follow God. But there are those fools who are still looking for the
magic in the miracle of every morning. They are so busy looking for
magic that they do not see the miracles around them. What a
temptation. What a temptation for fools. They want magic but miss
the miracles.
Then there was a
third temptation. Jesus was taken up to Mount Hermon that was 9700
feet high, and so I am going to take Jesus up to the top of Mount
Rainier. Jesus is on the top of Mount Rainier and there is not a
cloud in the sky. He can see all the way into Canada to the north
and all the way down to Oregon in the south. He can see way into the
west towards the ocean and all the way to the east to Spokane in
Eastern Washington. Jesus
has the grand vista from the mountaintop of Rainier to the north,
south, east and west. And the devil said, “This is all yours,
Jesus. You’ll be the most powerful person in the world. You will
be the most glorious person in the world, if all you do is fall down
and worship me.” Jesus said, “You shall worship God and serve
only God.” … Here
was a temptation that was at the root of so many temptations. The
temptation is the pursuit of glory, status, power, self-importance,
self-glorification. Satan tempted Jesus and he tempts us in the same
ways. Satan can take our God given abilities; Satan takes our
brains, our personalities, our bodies, our talents, our resources
that God has given to us, and Satan tempts us to use our God-given
talents and resources to elevate ourselves above the person sitting
next to us. I have more brains than you. I have more beauty than
you. I have more talent than you. I have a better body than you. We
take the gifts that God has given to us and use them to elevate
ourselves above other people. What an illusion. What a deception. To
use our God-given brains, resources, talents, gifts, bodies to
pretend that we are better than someone else. … And besides,
we are not attracted to such people who use God’s gifts to feel
and act superior to others. We are not attracted to such illusions
of superiority but we are attracted to people who are humble, who
are gifted but use their gifts in all humility and graciousness.
Temptations.
Wouldn’t it be nice if temptations merely had to do with sugar
cookies, ice cream and popcorn? But temptations have to do with the
gut issue of life. Whether or not God knows and counts the numbers
of hairs on your head. Whether or not we live in a way that is
pleasing to God.
The purpose of the
Bible passage today is to encourage us to resist temptation, the way
that Jesus resisted temptation. The purpose of this Biblical text is
not to say that there are a variety of temptations for each one of
us. The purpose is not to suggest we are to put ourselves in
situations where we will be tempted innumerable times so that we
finally cave into the temptation. The purpose of this Biblical story
today is for us to be strong. Be strong my son. Be strong my
daughter. Be strong against the onslaughts of the devil. Just as the
temptation is not theoretical and just as the temptations we face
are not hypothetical, so also the strength of God to resist
temptation is not hypothetical, the strength of God is not
imaginary, the resources of God are not illusionary. God does
empower us with the Holy Spirit, the divine words living inside of
us, and the Indwelling Presence, so that we too can resist the real
temptations in our lives as well. Amen.
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