Summary: We can only win over and against temptation by putting our faith in Jesus Christ who can help us to resist temptation.

BAPTISM AND THE BATTLEGROUND

Text: Mark 1:9-15

"It is said that Ignatius of Loyola once had a hole dug for the novices [rookies] of his order a grave, having them buried except for their heads, asking, "Are you dead?" To those who answered yes, he would reply, "Rise then, and begin to serve me." (Thomas Oden. [quoting A. H. Strong]. Life In The Spirit. Peabody: Prince Press, 2001, p. 160). What Ignatius was doing is symbolic of what baptism is all about. For it is in our baptism that we are baptized into the likeness of Jesus. Consider Romans 6:3-4: "Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, so that as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life" (RSV). We have to realize that just because we have been baptized of water and the Spirit does not mean that we will never face temptation again.

Before we were baptized, we were not sealed by the Holy Spirit (John 6:27). After Jesus was baptized, He was sealed by the Holy Spirit (John 6:27) as are all who are baptized into His likeness (Romans 6:3-4). Through baptism we become dead to sin and arise to the newness of life in Jesus Christ and sealed by God’s Holy Spirit. Being sealed by God’s Holy Spirit does not make us exempt from temptation. We can only win over and against temptation by putting our faith in Jesus Christ who can help us to resist temptation.

SATAN STRIVES TO MAKE EVERY TEMPTATION A WATERLOO

Napoleon was defeated at the Battle of Waterloo. "Napoleon is said to have lost the battle of Waterloo because he counted on one of his Generals bringing forward reserves. But the General was behind time, and Napoleon’s fall was the result. "Too late" (Matt. 25:10). (John Ritchie. 500 Gospel Sermon Illustrations. Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, 1978, p. 138). If we try to win against temptation without depending on the help of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, we are setting ourselves up for a "Waterloo type of defeat". "When we in our own strength confide, our striving will be losing" (paraphrase of the second verse of Martin Luther’s hymn A Mighty Fortress Is Our God). We simply cannot stand by ourselves against the power of temptation an expect to win.

Satan tried to conquer Jesus and bring Him to His "Waterloo". Unlike Matthew and Luke, Mark’s Gospel does not supply us with the details of how Satan tempted Jesus. Mark’s Gospel does tell us that Satan tried to entice Jesus to sin when he tempted Jesus. "Sin breaks fellowship with God. A little girl committed a certain offense, and when her mother discovered it she began to question her daughter. Immediately the child lost her smile and a cloud darkened her face as she said, "Mother, I do not feel like talking." So it is when our fellowship with God is broken by sin in our lives. We do not feel like talking to Him. If you do not feel like praying, it is probably a good indication that you should start praying immediately". (Billy Graham as quoted by Roy B. Zuck. The Speaker’s Quote Book. Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, 1997, p. 356). As someone once said, "Sin will keep us from prayer or Prayer will keep us from sin".

When we pray, we are staying in contact with God and seeking His guidance. That is exactly what Jesus did in the wilderness. The Greek New Testament uses a Greek word "nesteuo" (nhsteuwƒwƒn that translates a kind of fasting that is done with prayer. (See 1 for Greek sources at the end). Jesus was always consulting God in prayer in all that He did during the time of His earthly ministry. It is sometimes, if not oftentimes our habit to face things like trials and temptations without God’s help and make a mess of it and then ask Him in prayer to bless the mess we have made.

WE ARE ONLY VICTORIOUS OVER AND AGAINST TEMPTATION THROUGH THE HELP OF JESUS

Jesus conquered sin even though He was tempted. Dwight L. Moody once said, "To be tempted is not to sin. The strongest attacks are made on the strongest forts". (Roy B. Zuck. The Speaker’s Quote Book. Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, 1997, p. 376). Jesus Christ is "our bulwark---our Mighty Fortress never failing"! Jesus was tempted when He was physically weak, hungry and alone as he had fasted for forty days. And though He was tested and tempted in the wilderness by Satan, as vulnerable as He was, He did not give in to those temptations.

"One of the aboriginal tribes of the South Seas has a rite of passage from boyhood to manhood called a "walkabout." A boy coming to puberty is sent into the jungle for six weeks without food, shelter or weapons. During this time, he must test all of the survival skills he has learned during childhood. He must also be creative when he meets the unexpected. Talk about final examination! One mistake and he is dead. If, however, he survives to walk out of the jungle, he returns to a celebration that honors him as a man, a hunter and a warrior". (David L. McKenna. The Communicator’s Commentary Series: Mark. Volume 2. Dallas: Word Publishing, 1982, p. 41). The testing in the wilderness was Jesus’ equivalent of a "walkabout". Jesus went into His "walkabout" filled with the power of the Holy Spirit (Luke 4:1). And when Jesus left the wilderness, He returned in the power of the Spirit to Galilee (Luke 4:14).

When we pray to Jesus and keep Jesus near to us, temptations will lose their power. "I need thee every hour; stay thou nearby; temptations lose their power when thou art nigh". (The second verse of the hymn, "I need Thee Every Hour"). We have to put on the Gospel armor---each piece we put on with prayer. (Form the hymn, "Stand Up, Stand Up For Jesus"). Jesus will never fails at giving us the strength that we need for the crises that we encounter in daily life. We have to do our part to stay in fellowship and prayer with Jesus which means that effort is required. It is when we put our "spiritual lives" on "cruise control" that we will make of ourselves a shipwreck of the soul. Consider First Timothy 1:18-19: "This charge I commit to you, Timothy, my son, in accordance with the prophetic utterances which pointed to you, that inspired by them you may wage the good warfare, holding faith and a good conscience. By rejecting conscience, certain persons have made shipwreck of their faith" (RSV). Jesus does not want us to make a spiritual "shipwreck" of ourselves.

Jesus Christ God’s only begotten Son (John 3:16) is both fully human Divine. Jesus, who was without sin was baptized that we might identify with Him in His victory over sin’s power and dominion in our lives. Where we were once enslaved by sin, Jesus sets us free if we will only embrace the victory that He gives us over sin. Jesus wants us to identify with Him in His gift of grace and the newness of life that we experience in and through Him as we live as baptized believers in His name. We must therefore pick up our crosses and follow after Him (Mark 8:34) who is the way the truth and the life (John 14:6). Satan is forever trying to tempt us to sin and lose our way. James 4:7 tells us to resist the devil and he will flee. Luke 4:13 reminds us that "¡K when the devil had ended every temptation, he departed from him until an opportune time" (RSV). We have to remember our baptism and what it means to face the battlefield of temptation on a daily basis.

"While visiting in Leningrad, a woman heard the story of 900,000 people who perished in the long siege of Leningrad during World War II. At one point they were trying to save the children from both the nazis and starvation---so they placed them on trucks to cross a frozen lake to safer locations. Many of the mothers, sure that they would never see their children again, yelled to them as they got on the trucks, "Remember your name. Remember your name." By our baptism, we commit ourselves to faithfully remember who we are". (Herb Miller. Actions Speak Louder Than Verbs. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1989, p. 103). We remember our baptismal commitment of who we are by living our lives in such a way that we bear fruit in keeping with repentance (Matthew 3:8).

1 The Greek New Testament uses the Greek word, "nesteuo" (nhsteuwƒwƒnwhich is Greek for fasting. (W. E. Vine. Vine’s Expository Dictionary Of New Testament Words. McLean: MacDonald Publsihing Company, n.d., p. 420). This kind of fasting is "a ritual act accompanying season of prayer". (Marvin R. Vincent. Vincent’s Word Studies Of The New Testament. Peabody: Hendrickson Publishers, 20th Century reprint (n.d.) of an 1886 publication, p. 288).