Posted on 01/11/2022 7:47:15 AM PST by metmom
“After He had fasted forty days and forty nights, He then became hungry” (Matthew 4:2).
For a quite lengthy period prior to the three diabolical temptations directed at Jesus, He fasted. We don’t know exactly what He did during the forty-day period, but He likely spent most of the time communing with His heavenly Father.
Even in His perfect humanity, Jesus needed solitary preparation time in medi-tation and prayer, as we all do in anticipating a major testing. Consider how Moses spent forty years in Midian in preparation for his leadership of Israel out of Egypt to the Promised Land, or that the apostle Paul lived three years in the desert of Arabia before launching his extensive ministries.
Matthew reports, with much simplicity and directness, that at the end of the period of fasting, Jesus “became hungry.” Hunger weakens us physically and somehow leaves us more vulnerable to spiritual attack, which is precisely why Satan often assails us at such times. But temptations that we have anticipated and prayed about have little power to harm us, if we constantly rely on the Lord.
Jesus, though spending more than a month in fasting, is a tremendous example to us of remaining alert to spiritual danger, which He did as Satan approached. During the temptations, He did not yield on the slightest point.
Ask Yourself
What other feelings and conditions—like hunger—serve as ready-made points of entry for spiritual temptation? Knowing this, how can you better “keep watching and praying” that you not fall into sin (Mark 14:38)? Pray for the courage to live with such keen awareness.
From Daily Readings from the Life of Christ, Vol. 1, John MacArthur. Copyright © 2008. Used by permission of Moody Publishers, Chicago, IL 60610, www.moodypublishers.com.
Studying God’s Word ping
MacArthur is great. I like him printing the Lord in capital letters when referring to Him and He.
For those who might not realize:
Original KJV and many more recent ones use all cap LORD when the name of God in Hebrew is Yud-Heh-Vav-Heh, and the more generic ‘God’ is used for Elohim.
Jesus never said, “If you fast...” but said, “When you fast...”. Just an FYI.
Good point.
Agreed. I do the same. It sounds minor but I feel its a minor sign of respect and acknowledgement of His greatness.
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