The Temptation
of Christ
by Martin
Luther (1483-1546)
The following sermon
is taken from volume II:133-147 of The Sermons of Martin Luther,
published by Baker Book House (Grand Rapids, MI). It was originally
published in 1906 in english by Lutherans in All Lands Press (Minneapolis,
MN), as The Precious and Sacred Writings of Martin Luther, vol.
11. The original title of this sermon appears below. The pagination
from the Baker edition has been maintained for referencing. This
e-text was scanned and edited by Richard Bucher, it is in the
public domain and it may be copied and distributed without restriction.
THE SERMONS OF MARTIN LUTHER,
VOL. II, PAGE 134
A
Sermon on Matt 4:1-11
I. THE
FASTING OF CHRIST.
- I.
This Gospel is read today at the beginning of Lent in order to
picture before Christians the example of
- Christ,
that they may rightly observe Lent, which has become mere mockery:
first, because no one can
follow this example and fast forty days and nights as Christ
did without eating any food. Christ rather followed
the example of Moses, who fasted also forty days and nights,
when he received the law of God on mount
Sinai. Thus Christ also wished to fast when he was about to bring
to us, and give expression to, the new law.
In the second place, Lent has become mere mockery because our
fasting is a perversion and an institution
of man. For although Christ did fast forty days, yet there is
no word of his that he requires us to do the same
and fast as he did. Indeed he did many other things, which he
wishes us not to do; but whatever he calls us
to do or leave undone, we should see to it that we have his Word
to support our actions.
- 2.
But the worst of all is that we have adopted and practiced fasting
as a good work: not to bring our flesh
into subjection; but, as a meritorious work before God, to atone
for our sins and obtain grace. And it is this
that has made our fasting a stench and so blasphemous and shameful,
so that no drinking and eating, no
gluttony and drunkenness, could have been as bad and foul. It
would have been better had people been
drunk
-
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- day
and night than to fast thus. Moreover, even if all had gone well
and right, so that their fasting had been
applied to the mortification of the flesh; but since it was not
voluntary it was not left to each to do according to
their own free will, but was compulsory by virtue of human commandment,
and they did it unwillingly, it was
all lost and to no purpose. I will not mention the many other
evils as the consequences, as that pregnant
mothers and their offspring, the sick and the weak, were thereby
ruined, so that it might be called a fasting of
Satan instead of a fasting unto holiness. Therefore we will carefully
consider how this Gospel teaches us by
the example of Christ what true fasting is.
- 3.
The Scriptures present to us two kinds of true fasting: one,
by which we try to bring the flesh into
subjection to the spirit, of which St. Paul speaks in 2 Cor 6,5:
"In labors, in watchings, in fastings." The other
is that which we must bear patiently, and yet receive willingly
because of our need and poverty, of which St.
Paul speaks in 1 Cor 4, 11: "Even unto this present hour
we both hunger, and thirst," and Christ in Mt 9,15:
"When the bridegroom shall be taken away from them, then
will they fast." This kind of fasting Christ teaches
us here while in the wilderness alone without anything to eat,
and while he suffers his penury without
murmuring. The first kind of fasting, one can end whenever he
wills, and can satisfy it by food; but the other
kind we must observe and bear until God himself changes it and
satisfies us. Hence it is much more precious
than the first, because it moves in greater faith.
- 4.
This is also the reason that the Evangelist with great care places
it first: Then was Jesus led up of the
Spirit into the wilderness, that be might there fast and be tempted,
so that no one might imitate his example
of their own choice and make of it a selfish, arbitrary, and
pleasant fasting; but instead wait for the Spirit, who
will send him enough fastings and temptations. For whoever, without
being led by the Spirit, wantonly resorts
to the danger of
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- hunger
or to any temptation, when it is truly a blessing of God that
he can eat and drink and have other
comforts, tempts God. We should not seek want and temptation,
they will surely come of themselves; we
ought then do our best and act honestly. The text reads: Jesus
was led up of the Spirit into the wilderness;
and not: Jesus himself chose to go into the wilderness. "For
as many as are led by the Spirit of God, these
are sons of God." Rom 8, 14. God gives his blessings for
the purpose that we may use them with
thanksgiving, and not that we may let them lie idle, and thus
tempt him; for he wishes it, and forces us to fast
by the Spirit or by a need which we cannot avoid.
- 5.
This narrative, however, is written both for our instruction
and admonition. First, for instruction, that we
should know how Christ has served and helped us by his fasting,
hunger, temptation and victory; also that
whoever believes on Christ shall never suffer need, and that
temptation shall never harm him; but we shall
have enough in the midst of want and be safe in the midst of
temptation; because his Lord and Head
triumphed over these all in his behalf, and of this he is assured,
as Christ says in John 16,33: "Be of good
cheer; I have overcome the world." God, who was able to
nourish Christ forty days without any food, can
nourish also his Christians.
- 6.
Secondly, this is written for our admonition, that we may in
the light of this example also cheerfully suffer
want and temptation for the service of God and the good of our
neighbor, like Christ did for us, as often as
necessity requires it; which is surely accomplished if we learn
and confess God's Word. Therefore this
Gospel is sweet consolation and power against the unbelief and
infamy of the stomach, to awaken and
strengthen the conscience, that we may not be anxious about the
nourishment of our bodies, but be assured
that he can and will give us our daily bread.
-
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- II.
THE TEMPTATION OF CHRIST.
- 7.
But as to how temptation takes place and how it is overcome,
is all very beautifully pictured to us here in
Christ. First, that he is led up into the wilderness, that is,
he is left solitary and alone by God, angels and
men, by all creatures. What kind of a temptation would it be,
if we were not forsaken and stood not alone? It
is, however, painful when we do not feel anything that presents
its back to us; as for example, that I should
support myself and have not a nickel, not a thread, not a twig,
and I experience no help from others, and no
advice is offered. That means to be led into the desert and to
be left alone. There I am in the true school,
and I learn what I am, how weak my faith is, how great and rare
true faith is, and how deeply unbelief is
entrenched in the hearts of all men. But whoever has his purse,
cellar and fields full, is not yet led into the
desert, neither is he left alone; therefore he is not conscious
of temptation.
- 8.
Secondly, the tempter came forward and attacked Christ with these
very same cares of food for the body
and with the unbelief in the goodness of God, and said: "If
thou art the Son of God, command that these
stones become bread," as if he should say: Yes, trust thou
in God and bake and cook nothing; only wait
patiently until a roasted fowl flies into your mouth; do you
now say that you have a God who cares for you;
where is now your heavenly Father, who has charge of you? Yea,
it seems to me he lets you in a fine
condition; eat now and drink from your faith, let us see how
you will satisfy your hunger; yea, when you have
stones for bread. What a fine Son of God you are! How fatherly
he is disposed toward you in that he fails to
send you a slice of bread and permits you to be so poor and needy;
do you now continue to believe that you
are his son and he is your father? With like thoughts he truly
attacks all the children of God. And Christ surely
felt this temptation, for he was no stock nor
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- stone;
although he was and remained pure and without sin, as we cannot
do.
- 9.
That Satan attacked Christ with the cares for daily food or with
unbelief and avarice, Christ's answer
proves, in that he says: "Man shall not live by bread alone;"
that sounds as if he said: thou wilt direct me to
bread alone and dost treat me as though I thought of nothing
but the sustenance of my body. This
temptation is very common also among pious people, and they especially
feel it keenly who have children
and a family, and have nothing to eat. Therefore St. Paul says
in I Tim 6, 10 that avarice is a root of all kind
of evil; for it is a fruit of unbelief. Do you not think that
unbelief, care and avarice are the reasons people are
afraid to enter married life? Why do people avoid it and live
in unchastity, unless it be the fear that they must
die of hunger and suffer want? But here we should consider Christ's
work and example, who suffered want
forty days and nights, and finally was not forsaken, but was
ministered to even by angels.
- 10.
Thirdly, behold how Christ resists this temptation of bread,
and overcomes; he sees nothing but stones
and what is uneatable then he approaches and clings to the Word
of God, strengthens himself by it and
strikes the devil to the ground with it. This saying all Christians
should lay hold of when they see that there is
lack and want and everything has become stones, so that courage
trembles, and they should say: What
were it if the whole world were full of bread, still man does
not live by bread alone, but more belongs to life,
namely, the Word of God. The words, however, are so beautiful
and powerful that we must not pass over
them lightly, but carefully explain them.
- 11.
These words Christ quotes from Deut. 8,3, where Moses says: "Thy
God humbled thee, and suffered
thee to hunger, and fed thee with manna, which thou knewest not,
neither did thy fathers know; that he might
make thee know that man doth not live by bread only, but by everything
that proceedeth out of the mouth of
Jehovah doth
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- man
live." That is as much as to say: Since God permits you
to hunger and you still continue to live, you
ought indeed to grasp the thought that God nourishes you without
bread through his Word; for if you should
live and sustain yourself by bread alone then you must continually
be full of bread. But the Word, that
nourishes us is, that he promises us and causes it to be published
that he is our God and desires to be our
God.
- 12.
Thus now, the meaning of Moses and of Christ is: Whoever has
here God's Word and believes, has both
blessings; the first, where he is in want and has nothing, but
must suffer hunger, that Word will sustain him,
so that he will not die of hunger nor perish, just as well as
if he had abundance to eat; for the Word he has in
his heart nourishes and sustains him without eating and drinking.
But has he little to eat, then a bite or slice
of bread will feed and nourish him like a kingly meal; for not
only bread but the Word of God also nourishes
the body naturally, as it creates and upholds all things, Heb
1, 3. The other blessing he will also enjoy,
namely, that finally bread will surely be at hand, come whence
it will, and should it rain from heaven like
manna where none grows and none can grow. In these two thoughts
every person can freely trust, namely,
that he must in time of hunger receive bread or something to
eat, or if not, then his hunger must become so
moderate and bearable that it will, nourish him even as well
as bread does.
- 13.
What has been said of eating and feeding the body he understood
also of drinking, clothing, house, and
all our needs: namely that although he still permits us to become
naked and suffer want for clothing, house
etc., clothing must finally be at hand, and before it fails the
leaves of the trees must become coats and
mantles; or if not, then the coats and garments that we wear
must never grow old; just as happened to the
Children of Israel in the desert Deut. 8, 2-4, whose clothing
and shoes never wore out. Likewise the wild
wilderness must become their
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- houses,
and there must be a way where there is no way; and water, where
there is no water; stones must
become water. For here stands God's Word, which says: "He
cares for you;" and St. Paul in 1 Tim 6, 17:
"God giveth us richly all things to enjoy;" and Mt.
6,33-34: "But seek ye first the kingdom of God and his
righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.
Be not therefore anxious for the morrow."
These and like words must continue true and stand forever firm.
- 14.
All this one may indeed learn from his own daily experiences.
For it is held, and I almost believe it, that
there are not as many sheaves of wheat grown as there are people
living on the earth; but God daily blesses
and increases the wheat in the sack, the flour in the tray, the
bread on the table and in the mouth, as Christ
did. John 6, 12 f. It is also noticeable that as a rule poor
people and their children are fatter and their food
reaches farther and agrees with them better than is the case
among the rich with all their provisions.
However that the godless at times suffer need, or in times of
famine many die of hunger, is caused by a
special plague as pestilence, war etc. In other ways we see that
in all things it is not the food, but the Word of
God that nourishes every human being.
- 15.
Now that God sustains all mankind by bread, and not by the Word
alone, without bread, is done to the
end, that he conceals his work in the world in order to exercise
believers; just as he commanded the children
of Israel to arm themselves and to fight, and yet it was not
his pleasure that victory should come through
their own sword and deeds; but he himself was to slay their enemies
and triumph with their swords and
through their deeds. Here it might also be said: The warrior
was not victorious through his sword alone, but
by every word that proceeded out of the mouth of God, as David
sings, Ps 44,6: "For I will not trust in my
bow, neither shall my sword save me." Also Ps 147, 10 and
33, 16-17: "He taketh no pleasure in the legs of
a man. A mighty man is not delivered by great
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- strength.
A horse is a vain thing for safety." Yet he uses man and
the horse, the sword and bow: but not
because of the strength and power of man and of the horse, but
under the veil and covering of man and the
horse he fights and does all. This he proves in that he often
did and daily does the same without man and
the horse, where there is need and he is not tempted.
- 16.
Thus he does also with the bread; since it is at hand, he nourishes
us. through it and by means of it, so
that we do not see it and we think the bread does it; but where
it is not at hand, there he nourishes us
without the bread, only through the Word, as he does by means
of the bread; so that thus bread is God's
helper, as Paul says in 1 Cor 3,9: "We are God's fellow
workers," that is, through and under our outward
ministerial office he gives inwardly his grace, which he also
could give and does give indeed without our
office; but since the office is at hand, one should not despise
it nor tempt God. Thus God sustains us
outwardly by bread; but only inwardly he gives that growth and
permanency, which the bread cannot give.
And the summary is: All creatures are God's larva and mummery,
which he permits to work with him and to
help to do everything that he can do and does do otherwise without
their cooperation, in order that we may
cleave alone to his Word. Thus, if bread is at hand, that we
do not therefore trust the more; or if there is no
bread present, that we do not therefore despair the more; but
use it when it is at hand, and do without it,
when there is none; being assured that we shall still live and
be sustained at both times by God's Word,
whether there be bread or no bread. With such faith one overcomes
avarice and temporal care for daily
bread in the right way.
- 17.
Christ's second temptation is opposed to the first and is repugnant
to common sense. Its substance is
that the devil teaches us to tempt God; as he here calls to Christ
to cast himself down from the pinnacle of
the temple, which was not at all necessary, since there were
surely
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- good
steps upon which he could descend. And that this temptation was
for the purpose of tempting or
making trial of God, the answer of Christ also clearly proves,
when he says: "Thou shalt not make trial of the
Lord thy God." By this he shows that the devil wished to
lead him into temptation.
- 18.
And this very appropriately follows the first temptation. For
where the devil feels a heart trusts God in
times of want and need, he soon ceases his temptation of bread
and avarice and thinks: Wait, wilt thou be
very spiritual and believing, I will assist you: He approaches
and attacks on the other side, that we might
believe where God has not commanded us to believe, nor wills
that we should believe. For example, if God
gave you bread in your homes, as he does yearly everywhere in
the world, and you would not use it, but
instead you would cause need and want yourselves, and say: Why,
we are to believe God; I will not eat the
bread, but will patiently wait until God sends me manna from
heaven. See, that would be tempting God; for
that is not believing where all is at hand that we need and should
have. How can one believe that he will
receive what he already has?
- 19.
Thus you see here that Satan held before Christ want and need
where there was neither want nor need;
but where there was already good means by which to descend from
the temple without such a newly devised
and unnecessary way of descending. For this purpose Satan led
Christ to the top of the temple, in the holy
city, says the Evangelist, and placed him in a holy place. For
he creates such precious thoughts in man that
he thinks he is filled with faith and is on the true way of holiness;
and yet he does not stand in the temple, but
is only on the outside of the temple, that is, he is not in the
true holy mind or life of faith; and yet he is in the
holy city; that is, such persons are found only in Christendom
and among true Christians, who bear a great
deal of preaching about faith. To these persons he applies the
sayings of Scripture. For such per-
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- sons
learn Scripture also by daily hearing it; but not farther than
they can apply it to their erroneous opinions
and their false faith. For Satan here quotes from the Psalter,
Ps 91, 11-12, that God commanded the angels
that they should protect the children of God and carry them on
their hands. But Satan like a rogue and cheat
fails to quote what follows, namely, that the angels shall protect
of God in all their ways. For the Psalm reads
thus,: "For he will give his angels charge over thee to
keep thy ways. They shall bear thee up in their hands,
lest thou dash thy foot against a stone;" hence the protection
of the angels does not reach farther, according
to the command of God, than the ways in which God has commanded
us to walk. When we walk in these
ways of God, his angels take care of us. But the devil omits
to quote "the ways of God" and interprets and
applies the protection of the angels to all things, also to that
which God has not commanded; then it fails and
we tempt God.
- 20.
Now, this temptation seldom takes place in outward things as
bread, clothing, house, etc. For we find
many foolhardy people, who risk and endanger life, their property
and honor, without any need of doing so;
as those do who wilfully enter into battle or jump into the water,
or gamble for money, or in other ways
venture into danger, of whom the wise man says in Sirach 3, 27:
"Whoever takes pleasure in danger, will
thereby be overcome;" for in the degree one struggles to
get a thing, will he succeed in obtaining it;
swimmers are likely to drown and good climbers likely to fall.
Yet it is seldom that those of false faith in God
abstain from bread, clothing and other necessities of life when
they are at hand. As we read of two hermits,
who would not accept bread from the people, but thought God should
send it to them directly from heaven;
so the consequence was that one died and went to his father,
the devil, who taught him such faith and left
him fall from the pinnacle.
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- 21.
But in spiritual matters this temptation is powerful when one
has to do with the nourishment not of the
body but of the soul. Here God has held before us the person
and way, by which the soul can be forever
nourished in the richest manner possible without any want, namely
Christ, our Saviour. But this way, this
treasure, this provision no one desires. Everybody seeks another
way, other provisions to help their souls.
The real guilty ones are those who would be saved through their
own work; these the devil sets
conspicuously on the top of the temple. They follow him and go
down where there is no stairway; they
believe and trust in their own work where there is no faith nor
trust, no way nor bridge, and break their
necks. But Satan makes use of and persuades them through the
Scriptures to believe that the angels will
protect them, and that their way, works and faith are pleasing
to God, and who called them through the
Scriptures to do good works; but they do not care how falsely
they explain the Scriptures.
- 22.
Who these are, we have identified often enough and very fully,
namely, work righteous persons and
unbelieving hypocrites under the name of being Christians and
among the congregation of Christian people.
For the temptation must take place in the holy city and one temptation
is seldom against another. In the first
temptation want and hunger are the reasons that we should not
believe; and by which we become anxious to
have a full sufficiency, so that there is no chance for us to
believe. In the second temptation, however, the
abundance and the full sufficiency are the reasons that we do
not believe, by which we become tired of the
common treasure, and every one tries to do something through
his own powers to provide for his soul. So
we do; if we have nothing, then we doubt God and believe not;
if we have abundance, then we become tired
of it and wish to have something different, and again we fail
to believe. There we flee and turn against want
and seek abundance: here we seek want and flee from the
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- abundance
we have. No, whatever God does for us, is never right. Such is
the bottomless, wickedness of
our unbelief.
- 23.
Christ's third temptation consists in temporal honor and power;
as the words of the devil clearly teach,
when Satan shows and offers Christ all the kingdoms of the world
if he would worship him. To this class
those belong who fall from their faith for the sake of honor
and power, that they may enjoy good days, or not
believe further than their honor and power extend. Such are also
the heretics who start sects and factions in
matters of faith among Christians, that they may make a great
parade before the world and soar aloft in their
own honor. Hence one may place this third temptation on the right,
and the first on the left side. The first is
the temptation of misfortune, by which man is stirred to anger,
impatience and unbelief; the third and last,
the temptation of prosperity, by which man is enticed to lust,
honor, joy, and whatever is high. The second or
middle temptation is spiritual and deals with the blind tricks
and errors that mislead reason from faith.
- 24.
For whom the devil cannot overcome with poverty, want, need and
misery, he attacks with riches, favor,
honor, pleasure, power and the like, and contends on both sides
against us; yea, "he walketh about," says
St. Peter in 1 Pet 5,8, so that if he cannot overthrow us either
with suffering or love, that is, with the first
temptation on the left or the third on the right, he retires
to a higher and different method and attacks us with
error, blindness and a false understanding of the Scripture.
If he wins there, we fare ill on all sides and in all
things; and whether one suffers poverty or has abundance, whether
he fights or surrenders, all is lost. For
when one is in error, neither patience in misfortune nor firmness
in prosperity helps him; seeing that in both
heretics are often powerful and the devil deliberately acts as
if he were overcome in the first and last
temptations, although he is not, if he has only won in the middle
or second temptation. For he lets his
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- own
children suffer much and be patient, even at times to spurn the
world; but never with a true and honest
heart.
- 25.
Now these three temptations taken together are heavy and hard;
but the middle one is the greatest; for it
attacks the doctrine of faith itself in the soul, and is spiritual
and in spiritual matters. The other two attack
faith in outward things, in fortune and misfortune, in pleasure
and pain etc., although both severely try us.
For it is sad that one should lay hold of heaven and ever be
in want and eat stones where there is no bread.
Again, it is sad to despise favors, honor and possessions, friends
and associates, and let go what one
already has. But faith, rooted in God's Word, is able to do all
things; is faith strong, then it is also easy for the
believer to do this.
- 26.
The order of these temptations, as they met Christ, one cannot
absolutely determine; for the Evangelists
give them in different order. The temptation Matthew places as
the middle one, Luke places last, Luke 4,4 f.;
and again, the temptation Luke places in the middle, Matthew
places last, as if little depended on the order.
But if one wished to preach or speak of them, the order of Luke
would be the better. For it is a fine
opportunity to repeat and relate that the devil began with want
and misfortune; when that did not work, then
he began with prosperity and honor; and last, when all fails,
that he wantonly and wickedly springs forth and
strikes people with terror, lies and other spiritual tricks.
And since they have no order in practice and
experience, but as it happens that a Christian may be attacked
at one time with the last, and another time
with the first etc., Matthew gave little attention to the order
for a preacher to observe in speaking of this
theme. And perhaps it was also the same with Christ through the
forty days that the devil held to no order,
but today attacked him with this and tomorrow with another temptation,
and again in ten days with the first
and so on, just as occasion was given.
- 27.
At last angels approached and served him. This
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- must
have taken place in a literal sense, that they appeared in a
bodily form and gave him to eat and drink,
and just as at a table, they ministered to all his wants. For
the service is offered outwardly to his body, just
like, no doubt, the devil, his tempter, also appeared in a bodily
form, perhaps like an angel. For, seeing that
he places him on the pinnacle of the temple and shows him all
the kingdoms of the world in a moment, he
must have been a higher being than a man, since he represents
himself as a higher being, in that he offers
him all the kingdoms of the world and permits himself to be worshiped.
But he surely did not bear the form of
the devil, for he desires to be beautiful when he lies and deceives,
as St. Paul says of him in 2 Cor 11, 14:
"For even Satan fashioneth himself into an angel of light."
- 28.
This however is written for our comfort, that we may know that
many angels minister also to us, where
one devil attacks us; if we fight with a knightly spirit and
firmly stand, God will not let us suffer want, the
angels of heaven would sooner appear and be our bakers, waiters
and cooks and minister to all our wants.
This is not written for Christ's sake for he does not need it.
Did the angels serve him, then they may also
serve us.
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