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"For faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ." ~ Romans 10:17

Monergism and Synergism

3/12/2025

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Invocavit (Lent 1)
Matthew 4:1-11
Pastor James Preus
Trinity Lutheran Church
March 9, 2025
 
Do you children know what Monergism means? Monergism comes from the Greek words for alone and working. Regarding our salvation, God works alone. You don’t help at all. As David went out on the battlefield by himself with his sling and sack of rocks to face the giant Goliath, so our Lord Jesus Christ went into the wilderness alone to face Satan, and He won without our help. Christ alone won your salvation. He did this through His active and passive obedience.
Jesus’ active obedience is when He obeyed God’s Law in human flesh in our place. St. Paul writes in Galatians 4, “But when the fulness of time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the Law, to redeem those who were under the Law, so that we might receive adoption as sons.” Jesus fulfilled the Law for us. He did what Adam and Eve and every human being after them, including you, have failed to do. He withstood the temptation of Satan and was a perfectly obedient Son of God.
Jesus’ passive obedience is when He suffered the punishment for our sins. St. Paul writes in 2 Corinthians 5, “For our sake, He made Him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God.” And again, in Galatians 3, he writes, “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the Law by becoming a curse for us—for it is written, ‘Cursed is everyone who is hanged on a tree.” Christ fulfilled the Law without your help. And He satisfied the wrath of God against all sins without your help by suffering alone on the cross. Christ worked alone to redeem you from your sins. That is Monergism.
Not only did God work alone to redeem you from your sins, but God worked alone to convert you to the saving faith. We rightly confess in our Catechism, “I believe that I cannot by my own reason or strength believe in Jesus Christ my Lord or come to Him, but the Holy Spirit has called me by the Gospel, enlightened me with His gifts, sanctified and kept me in the true faith.” We confess this, because the Bible clearly teaches that by nature, we are sinful and incapable of accepting God or believing the Gospel. St. Paul says in Ephesians 2 that we were dead in our trespasses and sins and were children of wrath like the rest of mankind until God made us alive by grace. And he writes in 1 Corinthians 12 that no one can say that Jesus is Lord except in the Holy Spirit (vs.3). And as I noted last week, Jesus says that no one can come to Him unless the Father draws him (John 6:44). So, your conversion to the Christian faith is entirely a work of God. You were spiritually dead, and God made you alive. You were unwilling, and God made you willing. Your conversion to Christ is divine monergism, that is, God alone accomplished the work to make you a Christian.
Regarding your redemption and your conversion, the Bible rejects Synergism. Do you know what Synergism is? Synergism comes from the Greek words for together and working. Synergism means working together. We do not work together with God to redeem ourselves or justify ourselves before God. God works alone. We do not work together with God to convert ourselves to the saving faith. God worked alone to bring you to spiritual life. You accept the preaching of the Gospel, because the Holy Spirit works through the Word to create faith. In Baptism, it is God who works to forgive your sins, give you His Holy Spirit, join you to Christ’s death and resurrection, and make you God’s child. And it is God, who through His Word and Sacraments keeps you in the true faith. From beginning to end, your salvation is entirely God’s work. That is divine Monergism. Regarding your salvation, Synergism is entirely rejected.
Yet, in 2 Corinthians 6, St. Paul says, “Working together with Him, then, we appeal to you not to receive the grace of God in vain.” Paul says that we work with God. He even uses the Greek word “Συνεργοῦντες (synergountes), where we get the word Synergism. Yet, here, St. Paul is not talking about redemption, justification, conversion, or salvation. He is speaking of the activity of Christians in their daily renewal. While we do not work with God to save ourselves, after we have been converted and the Holy Spirit has caused us to be born again into a new creation, our new self does work with God. Our Lutheran Confessions explains it in Formula of Concord article II on Free Will, “As soon as the Holy Spirit has begun His work of regeneration and renewal in us through the Word and holy Sacraments, we can and should cooperate through His power, although still in great weakness. This cooperation does not come from our fleshly natural powers, but from the new powers and gifts that the Holy Spirit has begun in us in conversion.” (SD II:65)
So, regarding our salvation, God works monergistically. Yet, regarding our sanctification, that is, our daily renewal, we work with God, our new self being guided by the Holy Spirit to do what is pleasing to God. Some arrogantly ask, “If God does all the work for our salvation, why should we do any good works at all?” Yet, they ignore what God’s salvation does to us. God’s salvation makes us His children! If a father tells his son to take out the trash, does his son say, “Father, I know that I am your son by grace apart from my works and that I will remain your son whether I take out the trash or not, so I will continue to sit here watching TV and will ignore your command to take out the trash.”? How absurd! And should we behave in such a way to our heavenly Father, ignoring His commandments and doing whatever our sinful flesh pleases? No, having been saved by God through grace, by His work alone, we now seek to please Him as a good son seeks to please his father. We desire to work with Him for good, even if it is in great weakness.
And so, understanding the distinction between Monergism and Synergism, and how we are saved by God’s work alone apart from our help, yet having been made God’s children by grace, we desire to work with Him, we learn how to understand Christ’s temptation from Satan. On the one hand, we see Christ battling alone without our help to vanquish our evil foe and win for us salvation. On the other hand, we see Christ giving us an example, so that we may learn to work with Him, to resist the temptations of the devil, and to not receive the grace of God in vain.
Christ begins His temptation after He was baptized and declared to be God’s beloved Son in whom He is well pleased. And so, we cannot properly combat the devil until we first have been baptized, have put on Christ, and have become children of God. Then, we wear Christ’s victory, which He won for us without our help. Then also, our new self is empowered by the Holy Spirit to work with God to resist temptation and strive to please Him.
The first temptation Satan threw at Jesus was turning His tribulation against Him. Jesus had been fasting in the wilderness for forty days. The Holy Spirit had led Him into this situation. Satan tempted Christ to take off His divinely appointed burden and care instead for the needs of His body. Satan does the same for you. Although God has in His power to give you everything you could ever want, the Holy Spirit leads you through trials and tribulation for your own good. Satan tries to use these trials to turn you into your own flesh, to forsake God’s Word, thinking that God will not provide for you. And so, people choose jobs that keep them from ever coming to church, they become obsessed with turning stones into bread, that is, making money or solving their earthly problems, that they ignore God’s Word and preaching. Yet, Jesus teaches us to use Holy Scripture to combat Satan. “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every Word that comes from the mouth of God.” (Deuteronomy 8:3). And so, you remind Satan and yourself that God will care for your physical needs if you seek first His kingdom and Righteousness (Matthew 6:33).
Next, the devil tempts Christ to test God. He misquotes Psalm 91 by taking out the line, “to guard you in all your ways,” so that it sounds like Scripture preaches a prosperity Gospel. Satan does the same to you. He tries to get you to blaspheme God by living an ungodly life, thinking that you are secure in your salvation even when you continue in sin, drunkenness, fornication, despising God’s Word, and other reckless behavior. Yet, Jesus employs Holy Scripture again, “You shall not put the Lord your God to the test.” (Deuteronomy 6:16). And so, you too, do not test the Lord, testing His patience, testing the power of your Baptism, by continuing in sins you know are wrong. Rather, use Scripture to warn yourself against such testing of God. St. Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 10, “Therefore let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed lest he fall.” God indeed sends His angels to protect you. However, if you continue to resist His Holy Spirit, you cast off the care of His angels and God will deliver you over to your own depraved sins which lead to death and damnation.
Finally, Satan tempted Jesus to worship him in exchange for the kingdoms of the world. Jesus Himself told His disciples that Satan is the ruler of this world (John 14:3). Yet, Satan can only give the things of this world temporarily before you die and go to hell. He can offer no eternal treasure. Only God can do that. So, Jesus again teaches us to quote the Bible, “You shall worship the Lord your God and serve Him only.” (Deuteronomy 6:13) Most people scoff at the idea that they worship Satan. Yet, Jesus teaches us that whatever you fear, love, and trust in most is your god. And so, whatever of this world that you love most, fear most, trust in most, is your god. And Satan is the ruler of this world for now. So, love of the world is the truest form of Satanism. So, when your love for things of this world demands your devotion above God and His Word, then you are bending the knee to Satan.
It is a great comfort that your salvation is by God’s Monergism. This gives you certainty that your sins are forgiven and confidence to rely on His Word and Sacraments to keep you in the saving faith. Yet, having been rescued from sin, death, and hell by God alone, He has made you His coworker in the Kingdom, although in this life, you can only work in great weakness led by the Holy Spirit. Yet, if you are a child of God, you will work with Him. God truly has made you into a new creation. If you stop working with God, that is a sign that you have rejected God and lost the faith. But Scripture teaches us to work, to strive with Satan using the weapons given us by God, His Holy Word found in Scripture and prayer. Using these tools given by God, you can indeed resist temptation and cause Satan to flee from you (James 4:7). And you can do this with confidence, because the battle does not depend on you. It depends on Christ, who has won the battle against Satan without your help.
And so, the greatest Word of God you can wield against Satan is the victory Christ won against Satan. God gives us that victory through faith as a gift apart from our works. And it is through faith in Christ that we work together with God and cause the devil to flee from us. It is through faith in Christ that we find the strength and will to follow God’s commandments. And it is through faith in Christ that we find victory, even after seeing our own failures again and again. May God the Holy Spirit lead us to spurn Satan through faith in Christ and grant us the aid of His holy angels, so that we do not labor in vain. Amen.  
 

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Trampling Satan

2/22/2024

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Invocative Sunday (Lent 1)
Matthew 4:1-11
Trampling Satan
Pastor James Preus
 
In 1 Samuel chapter 17 a hefty wager is made on a strange battle. Goliath the Philistine giant made a wager with the Israelite army. He would fight any of them. If an Israelite soldier could defeat him, then the Philistine army would be their slaves. However, if Goliath kills the Israelite soldier, then the Israelites would be the Philistines’ slaves. The stakes were too high and the odds seemed against them, so the Israelites were too afraid to fight. But the children here know the end of this story. Young David, a shepherd boy, without any sword in his hand, but a sling and a pouch with five smooth stones, confronted Goliath and challenged him in the name of the LORD. And with a quick fling of the sling and by the guiding of the Lord, that shepherd boy slew the giant and won the victory for Israel.
This beloved Bible story foreshadowed an even stranger battle with much higher stakes, first foretold in the Garden of Eden when mankind fell into sin, “I will put enmity between you and the woman and between your seed and her seed; He will bruise your head, and you shall bruise His heal.” (Genesis 3:15) Jesus stepped onto the battle field to do what no human being had ever done, defeat Satan. Satan was Goliath. Jesus was David. If Satan won, he took everything, all mankind, every single human being who ever had been born and ever would be born, as his slaves. Yet, if Christ won, He rescued us from Satan’s bondage to transport us into His kingdom of light.
Christ won. And He did not simply tie Satan up in a little ball and cast him into hell, as He has always had the power to do as Almighty God. Christ defeated Satan in human flesh. St. Paul writes, “But when the fulness of time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive the adoption as sons.” (Galatians 4:4-5). Jesus was born under the law as our brother. He was tempted in every respect as we are, except without sin (Hebrews 4:15). And thus, he fulfilled the Law in our place and gives us the victory.
Yet, it was not enough for Christ to obey the Law in our place. And His victory over Satan in the wilderness is not the end, but only a battle. Christ must go to the cross. To His active obedience of obeying the law, He must add his passive obedience of suffering and dying for our sins. As He heard Satan say, “If you are the Son of God” when He was tempted in the wilderness, so he must hear him from the cross, “If you are the Son of God, come down!” (Matthew 27:40) The five stones David carried in his pouch have been said to symbolize the Scriptures, because Moses wrote five books. And so, Christ defeated Satan by employing Holy Scripture. Yet, it was when the five wounds were placed in Jesus’ flesh that His victory was finished.
And so, by being tempted, yet without sin, Jesus was the perfect sacrificial lamb without blemish, who was offered up to take away our sins. His heel was bruised by Satan, but He crushed Satan’s head. By one man’s disobedience the many were made sinners, so now by this one man’s obedience the many will be made righteous. (Romans 5:19) Jesus said in Luke 22 that Satan demanded to have Peter to sift him like wheat. Satan, the great accuser, demanded to have all of us. On account of our sins, Satan claimed ownership over us. He demanded us from God. Yet, Christ has made full atonement for our sins. The Stronger Man has broken into the house of the strong man, bound him, and plundered his possessions (Luke 11:12). Now God has delivered us from the dominion of darkness and has transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of our sins (Colossians 1:13-14).
Yet, the devil remains a deadly adversary. Like a roaring lion, he prowls around seeking someone to devour (1 Peter 5:8). He uses temptation to sin and unbelief to draw us out of the kingdom of light and back into the kingdom of darkness. As Christ came up from the waters of His Baptism and immediately entered the wilderness to be tempted by Satan, so we baptized Christians must endure temptation as we sojourn in this wilderness. If Satan was so bold as to go after Christ Himself, he will not hesitate to attack you. This is nothing to take lightly. Some, by rejecting faith and a good conscience, have made shipwreck of their faith (1 Tim. 1:19). If we continue in sin without repenting, God may give us up to our passions and the Holy Spirit may depart from us, so that we become servants of Satan again. So, this is no time for complacency. St. Paul calls us to put on the whole armor of God, so that we may be able to stand against the schemes of the devil (Ephesians 6:11).
In Jesus’ temptation from Satan, He draws our attention to three helps available to us against temptation. First, the Word of God, which is the sword of the Spirit (Ephesians 6:17). Satan’s first temptation of Jesus was to break the Third Commandment, “Remember the Sabbath Day by keeping it holy.” What does this mean? “We should fear and love God so that we do not despise preaching and His Word, but hold it sacred and gladly hear and learn it.” As Moses and Elijah did before Him (Deuteronomy 9:9; 1 Kings 19:8), Jesus went into the wilderness to fast for forty days and converse with God. Satan tempted Jesus that He did not need God’s Word, but rather bread for the body. Jesus quoted Scripture, Deuteronomy 8:3, stating that man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.
Yet, the lesson here is not simply to quote this passage, and the devil will flee from you. Rather, the lesson is to feast on the Word of God! Read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest Holy Scripture. When you rise and when you lie down, when you walk by the way with your children and when you sit down to eat (Deut. 6:6-7). The Word of God should be in your ears, on your tongue, and in your heart. And you will find that the more you feast on the God’s Word, the less you hunger for the transitory bread of this life.
The bread we crave goes far beyond food for the belly. We crave stuff, money, possessions, power, influence, and many other man-made gods. We crave them, because, like the children of Israel in the wilderness, we do not trust God to give us what we need and desire. So, we grumble and crave. We remain unsatisfied, and we toil in our dissatisfaction. But the more you listen and meditate on God’s Word, the more you learn that he cares for every need of your body, that you are worth more than many sparrows, which He does not fail to feed, so you should not fear to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, because all these things will be added unto you (Matt. 6:33). The more you feast on God’s Word, the more you learn to trust in Christ, His forgiveness and salvation, and to expect far greater things from Him than the glittering junk we’ve become so fascinated with here on earth. The more we feast on God’s Word, the more we recognize that all the treasures of this world wither and fade away when the breath of the Lord blows on it, but the promises of God in His Word endure forever.
The more you gladly hear and learn God’s Word the more you learn that the Third Commandment teaches you the First Commandment, “You shall have no other gods,” so that you wait patiently to receive from the Lord’s bountiful hand rather than to worship at any false altar. The more you feast on God’s Word, the less appealing Satan’s temptations become.
The second help available to us in temptation is the holy angels. Angels came and ministered to Jesus after his temptation. However, Satan misapplied a scripture passage about angels to tempt Jesus. And Satan uses this same temptation against us today day. Satan quoted from Psalm 91, “He will command his angels concerning you … on their hands they will bear you up, lest you strike your foot against a stone.” However, Satan edited it. The actual passage says, “He will command his angels concerning you to guard you in all your ways. On their hands they will bear you up, lest you strike your foot against a stone.” (vss. 11-12) God indeed sends angels to assist us. Scripture says that they are ministering spirits sent out to serve for the sake of those who are to inherit salvation (Hebrews 1:14). The presence of angels is a great comfort to Christians, who know that evil spirits, that is, fallen angels, demons, are very present and seek to do us harm. However, angels are sent to protect those who are to inherit salvation, those who belong to Christ, and to guard them in the way of the Lord. We cannot test God and expect the protection of His angels when we forsake God’s Word and pursue our own pleasures.
We put the Lord to the test by misapplying and twisting His holy Word to serve our sinful pleasures. This is breaking the Second Commandment; you shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God. God sends angels to protect His Christians from danger. But part of that protection from danger is avoiding the paths of the wicked and the congregation of the unrighteous (Psalm 1). Yes, angels are sent to protect you from danger, but often, the most dangerous thing to do is to stand on God’s Word and to walk according to His commandments. You cannot plunge yourself into sin, thinking, “God’s angels will be with me.”
Angels are not a comfort to those who forsake God’s Word and follow paths of wickedness. Yet, to sinners who cling to Christ for mercy and hold on to the promises of God’s Word and follow His Commandments, the presence of angels is a great comfort. Jesus says that our angels always behold the face of our Father in heaven (Matthew 18:10). Psalm 103 calls them Mighty Ones, who obey the voice of God’s Word. And St. John tells us in Revelation 12 that the angels cast Satan and his angels out of heaven with the blood of the Lamb, Christ Jesus. So, when we cling to that blood, receiving it in the preaching of the Gospel, remembering that we were washed in it in our Baptism, and receiving it in the Sacrament of the Altar, we should remember that angels go with us to fight for us for the sake of that precious blood.
The third help Jesus teaches us is available to us in temptation is Himself. Christ goes with us all the way. He walks with us and fights for us. Yes, Christ, the Stronger Man, who bound the strong man, Satan, and plundered his house, the greater David who slew the greater Goliath, the Seed of the Woman, who crushed Satan under His foot, He goes with you as you face Satan. St. Paul writes in Galatians 3, “For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ.” (vs. 27) So, as you face Satan, you face him as his victor, not as his victim. Jesus promises that those who stand on the confession of Christ will prevail against the very gates of hell (Matthew 16:18) and that He is with His Church to the very end of the age (Matthew 28:20). St. Paul write in Romans 16, “The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.” It is those who are justified by faith, who are at peace with God (Romans 5:1). And so, it is through faith in Christ that we have assurance that our sins are forgiven and we have the confidence to pray that God would lead us out of temptation and deliver us from the evil one.  
It is through faith in Christ that we worship the Lord God and serve Him. St. Peter tells us to resist Satan firm in our faith, and God Himself will restore, confirm, strengthen, and establish us (1 Peter 3:10). And so, through faith in Christ, God gives you the authority to say, “Begone, Satan!” Amen. 

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Striving with Satan

3/7/2022

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Picture
The Temptation of Christ, Maestro Bartolemé, 1450-1493. Public Domain.
Invocavit Sunday (Lent 1) 
Matthew 4:1-11 
Pastor James Preus 
Trinity Lutheran Church 
March 6, 2022 
 
When people think of Satan, they often think of two extremes that are both false. The first extreme is that Satan is a harmless spirit, who couldn’t hurt you if he tried. (This is why many so flippantly play around with the occult, visit psychics, and try to make contact with the dead or other spirits). The other extreme is that Satan is an unconquerable foe against whom no one can help you, not even God. With this view, many look at Satan as God’s equal, an evil god, against whom all resistance is futile.  
​


Both these extremes of course are wrong. Satan is not harmless. He is our evil foe. Scripture calls him a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour, and a dragon, who claims many lives. Satan is our arch enemy, our number one problem. His goal is to lead you into sin and unbelief and to send you to hell. And he’s very good at it. He has claimed countless victims in his millennia long career, and he is not done. Yet, Satan is certainly conquerable. He is not all-powerful. He is only a fallen angel. He is not able to do anything beyond what God permits. And, our Lord Jesus Christ himself has defeated Satan for us in human flesh, so that we too might share in Jesus’ victory over Satan.  


Likewise, as with Satan, there are two extreme opinions about Jesus, both of which are false. The first extreme is that Jesus came to earth only to be our example, to show us how we can make it to heaven by our works. In this way, Jesus would be nothing more than a second Moses, a lawgiver. And he wouldn’t be any better than Moses, because Moses didn’t give any command that God himself didn’t give. This extreme leaves us with little hope of salvation, because our salvation would still depend on us.  


The second extreme, is that Jesus did not come to be our example at all; we do not need to learn from Jesus how to behave; since Jesus has overcome temptation in our stead, we can freely fall into temptation without fear; our sinning doesn’t matter; we don’t need to resist Satan. This extreme is equally wrong, because it gives the victory back to Satan after Jesus has won it for us! If you continue in sin without repenting, then you lose your salvation, as Hebrews 10 states, “For if we go on sinning deliberately after receiving the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins, but a fearful expectation of judgment, and a fury of fire that will consume the adversaries.” (25-26) Jesus did not come to earth only to be an example to follow. He came to earth to be our Champion and to defeat Satan in our stead. Yet, Jesus also is our example, whom we should learn from, so that we can withstand Satan when he attacks.  


Correcting these extremes about Satan and Jesus is important when confronting our own battle with Satan in this life. You’ll notice that immediately after Jesus was baptized in the Jordan River, the Holy Spirit led him into the wilderness to be temped by the devil. And so, we too, when we are baptized into Christ and become Christians through faith, the Holy Spirit leads us through this wilderness to be tempted by the devil for an appointed time. We must recognize that Satan is our deadly enemy, who desires to destroy our saving faith, and Jesus is our example in how we must fight against him.  


“If you are the Son of God,” Satan jeers at our Lord. And so, Satan accuses us saying, “If you are God’s own child…” But Jesus did not need to prove himself to Satan or meet Satan’s standard. And neither do we. We are God’s children, because God says so in our Baptism by the merits of Christ. So, Jesus teaches us not to be thrown off our footing when sparing with Satan. A key you find in every answer Jesus gives to the devil, “It is written.” We don’t fight Satan with lofty human wisdom, eloquent speech or convoluted philosophical arguments. We use the same sword of the Spirit (Ephesians 6:17) which our Lord took up in human flesh, the holy Word of God. Scripture was written for us to use it against Satan and his lies.  


The first word of Scripture Jesus employs is, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.” as quoted from Deuteronomy 8:3. This statement is often misunderstood to mean, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but also by what proceeds from the mouth of God.”, as if bread isn’t sufficient, God’s Word must be added. But that’s not what it says. Man lives by the word that proceeds from the mouth of God alone. Yes, you need to eat. Yes, the grain must grow; the livestock must be raised; the oil must be drilled, etc. But not a kernel will sprout but by the word of God. Not a loaf of bread, not a bite to eat, nor a shred of cloth to cover your naked body will be produced outside of the Word of God. God produces all these things by his omnipotent Word. And if he desires for you to live without them, he could sustain you by his Word alone. Yet, if God were to cause the earth to be filled with bread and every other delicacy we crave, as we now experience, yet were to withhold his saving Word from us, we would be lost. It would be better to starve in the wilderness, staring at rocks, than to live in a land full of bread without the Gospel of Christ, which alone gives life that will never die.  


And so, when Satan lies to you and tries to convince you that you need things other than or more than God’s Word, employ this dagger to his heart: “Man lives by the word of God alone.” And trust in God to provide for you.  


Second, Jesus quotes Deuteronomy 6, “You shall not put the Lord your God to the test.” After Satan tries to get Jesus to prove himself to be God’s Son, he then tries to get Jesus to test his Father himself. He did this by misquoting Psalm 91, yet leaving out the important line, “To guard you in all your ways,” as if God’s angels were sent to play games with Christians who like to jump off buildings and not to protect them from evil thrown at them by the devil and the sinful world.  


And this is how Satan tempts us. He tempts us to put God to the test. We put God to the test when we purposefully do what God forbids with the attitude that if God loves me, he’ll protect me. So, Satan fools people into neglecting going to worship and hearing God’s Word, participating in unchristian activity like drunkenness and fornication, all the while thinking that God won’t let the saving faith depart from their hearts. God’s angels will attend me, even if I purposefully walk down the path of unrighteousness and unbelief.  


Yet, Jesus teaches us to use Scripture: You shall not put the Lord your God to the test. God indeed promises to send his angels to us and to provide for us an escape out of temptation, but we must not test him by fleeing from his angels and ignoring the way of escape he provides.  


Finally, Jesus quotes, “You shall worship the Lord your God and him only you shall serve (Deuteronomy 6:13).” This word teaches us to serve our Lord in every faction of our life. Husbands and wives serve the Lord in your homes, workers at work, students at school. This word will remind us who we are and why we are doing everything in our life. It brings a constant check to our actions and a curb to Satan’s lies.  


Jesus certainly is our example in battle against Satan. And as angels attended him in his physical weakness, so God sends his angels to minister to us as we battle Satan in this wilderness. Yet, unlike Jesus, we do not finish every bout untouched. We don’t seek to live by God’s Word alone, but we crave after bread in all its forms, even neglecting to hear God’s Word and find strength in the Gospel, so that we can pursue more wealth. We test God’s patience and love by going longer and longer without prayer, longer without hearing and meditating on God’s word, further down dangerous roads, dabbling in our vices, indulging in sins, confident we’ll turn back when we need to, the angels won’t let us go too far. We pray, “lead us out of temptation,” but only halfheartedly, while our eye is already on that sin we long to commit. And we worship and serve other gods, who have found a place in our hearts. It might not seem so brazen as prostrating ourselves before Satan and worshiping him, but we serve and trust and love other gods, wealth, power, comfort, the affection of others, more than God.  


It's not that Jesus isn’t the perfect example, but that we fail to follow his perfect course. But Jesus didn’t come to be a mere example. He came to be our champion. During these forty days of Lent, we spend much time focusing on the passion of Jesus on the cross. Yet, here on the first Sunday in Lent, we see that Jesus overcomes Satan already in the wilderness. Jesus does not sin. And this we must keep in mind as we walk with Jesus to his cross on Good Friday. That Sacred Head there wounded is the same one who silenced Satan in the wilderness, who overcame every temptation. Our Jesus is without sin. Our Jesus is righteous, holy, perfectly obedient. But he suffers for sins he has not committed. Jesus is our perfect High Priest, able to sympathize with us in our weakness, yet he is not limited by his own sin, because he has none. Jesus is the perfect Sacrifice, a Lamb without spot or blemish, who can take our place under God’s punishment and satisfy his righteous wrath. Jesus makes atonement for our sins on the cross, because he defeated Satan in the wilderness. Jesus’ passive obedience on the cross was made perfect by his active obedience in the wilderness when he obeyed God rather than Satan.  


And so, Jesus proves himself to be the Seed of the Woman, who crushes the Serpent’s head, even as his heal is bruised on the cross. And this grants us the greatest and only sure victory over Satan. We have Jesus. As long as we have Jesus, Satan loses. We only lose to Satan if we lose Jesus, because even if we do sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, who has made atonement for all our sins. Do not underestimate Satan. Yet, do not fear him. If you have Jesus, you have already won. Amen.  
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Enmity with the Devil

2/22/2021

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Picture
Invocavit (Lent 1)  
Genesis 3:15 
Matthew 4:1-11 
February 21, 2021 
 
“The Lord God said to the serpent, …  
‘I will put enmity between you and the woman,  
And between your seed and her seed;  
He shall bruise your head,  
And you shall bruise his heel.’” (Genesis 3:15)  
 
 
When Adam sinned, he plunged the entire human race into sin and death. St. Paul explains, “Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all sinned…” (Romans 5:12) And so, it is expected that our God, who created the world to be good and who warned Adam against eating the forbidden fruit, would punish those who sullied his once perfect creation. Yet, even in his doling out of punishment, our God shows his immense mercy and grace. While it is true that our sins merit us eternal damnation and separation from God, the punishments God gave to Adam and Eve that day were temporary and they did not even remove the earthly blessings he gave us in creation. Yes, the woman would experience great pain in child-bearing and would have strife as she struggled against submitting to her husband, yet God still blessed the woman with children and with a husband. Yes, the man would experience pain and fatigue in his work and would eventually die and leave all his riches behind him, yet God still blessed him with food, clothing, and all that he needs for his body and life.  
Yet, to the serpent, Satan himself, God declared the ultimate punishment, complete destruction. And it is in the punishment of Satan that God first declares the promise of our salvation. God says, “I will put enmity between you and the woman and between your seed and her seed; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel.” God has put enmity between the devil and the mother of all the living. The serpent is Satan. This is not just any serpent. A snake is an animal not capable of enmity. Satan is a fallen angel, who possessed the serpent in order to tempt Adam and Eve into sin. Satan is at enmity with the woman and all her children. Satan is our enemy. In order for us to be saved, Satan must be defeated. So, in the very hour that Adam and Eve sinned, God promised their salvation by promising Satan’s defeat. The seed of the woman would bruise the serpent’s head. The bruising of the serpent’s head is the defeat of Satan. This will be accomplished through no one else that Jesus Christ, who was wounded for our transgressions (Isaiah 53:4).  
Satan is your enemy. In fact, the word Satan comes from the Hebrew word for adversary. Satan is the archenemy of God and his Church. If Satan is not your enemy, then you are his slave and he is your abusive father. But if God is your good and gracious Father, then Satan must be your enemy. Satan is the number one thing that stands between you and eternal life in heaven. For you to enter heaven, Satan must be defeated.  
Satan attacks you in two ways. First, he tempts you into sin. Second, he accuses you of sin in order to bring you to despair and unbelief. He tempts you into sin by lying. Jesus spoke to those Jews who refused to believe in him, “You are of your father the devil, and your will is to do your father’s desires. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks out of his own character, for he is a liar and the father of lies.” (John 8:44).  
Satan lies. That is how he leads you into sin. “Did God really say?” That’s his trick. Yes, that’s it. He questions God’s Word, whether God’s Word is true, whether it means what it clearly says, whether it is clear, whether it is God’s Word at all. Yet, he uses the constant pressure of the sinful world and the corruptness of your own sinful heart against you. So, while in theory it seems quite simple to resist Satan’s lies (simply believe God’s Word), he succeeds against you over and over again, until your heart feels hollow and your sins pile up on your conscience and go over your head (Psalm 38:4).  
And then Satan brings in his second way of attack. He accuses you. St. John records in Revelation chapter 12, “And the great dragon was thrown down, that ancient serpent, who is called the devil and Satan, the deceiver of the world….” And God’s people cried, “Now the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God and the authority of his Christ have come, for the accuser of our brothers has been thrown down, who accuses them day and night before our God.” This is what Satan does. He accuses us of the sins he himself has lured us into committing! And he is so brazen as to accuse us before the throne of God, as he did against God’s servant Job! In fact, the name devil comes from the Greek word for slanderer or accuser. The devil slanders and accuses us to our conscience and to our God. 
So, in order for God to rescue us from Satan, he must rescue us from these two attacks of the devil: the devil’s lies, by which he tempts us into sin and the devil’s accusations, by which he draws us to despair and unbelief. Jesus Christ is our champion, who defeats Satan against both these attacks.  
Jesus is the seed of the woman. It is peculiar that Scripture refers to the woman’s seed. Seed is something a man has. Usually when the Bible refers to someone’s seed, it refers to the descendants of fathers. But here, God speaks of the woman’s seed in order to prophecy the virgin birth of Jesus to his mother Mary. Jesus was born of a virgin, which is impossible by the natural course of things, because he is God. God himself, the eternal Son of the Father, came to fight Satan for us in human flesh. St. Paul writes, “But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons.” (Romans 5:4) 
The Son of God obviously had no need for himself to be under the law or to fulfill the law’s demands. Yet, he did so in human flesh in order to be our substitute. Jesus was obedient under the Law in our place. Through faith, we receive everything Jesus has. Jesus in our human flesh obeyed the Law, so through faith we receive his obedience. St. Paul writes in Romans chapter 5, “Therefore, as one trespass led to condemnation for all men, so one act of righteousness leads to justification and life for all men. For as by one man’s disobedience the many were made sinners, so by one man’s obedience the many will be made righteous.” We are made righteous, not by our own obedience, but by Christ’s obedience, which we receive through faith.  
Again, St. Paul writes, “Now to the one who works, his wages are not counted as a gift but as his due. And to the one who does not work but believes in him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted as righteousness.” Through faith, we receive the credit for the obedience of Christ, just as Abraham believed God’s promise and it was counted to him as righteousness (Romans 4:3; Genesis 15:6).  
“And you shall bruise his heel.” This refers to Jesus’ crucifixion. Jesus would be the perfect sacrifice for our sins. But in order to be a sacrifice for our sins, he needed to fulfill the Law in our place and be blameless like a lamb without spot or blemish. This is why the author to the Hebrews confesses Christ to be the perfect High Priest, he writes, “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin.” (Hebrews 4:15) 
This means that what we witness in Jesus’ temptations from Satan in the wilderness is our victory over Satan. Satan lied to Jesus. He denied God’s Word, he twisted God’s Word, he ignored God’s Word. Yet, Jesus in human flesh wielded the same weapon that is available to us humans. Jesus did not cast Satan away by his Divine power, but he strove with him as a man armed with God’s Word. And as a man, he defeated Satan’s lies. Jesus, our champion won.  
This also means that the devil’s second attack is impotent against us. What can Satan accuse us of? Sin? What sin? Jesus is our substitute. He couldn’t get Jesus to sin. We receive Jesus’ obedience through faith. Satan’s mouth is shut by the obedience of Christ. In that Revelation passage, which I read earlier, where the people of God rejoice that Satan, the accuser has been cast down, it goes on, “And they have conquered him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony.” When Satan accuses you of sin, through faith, you have the right to say to Satan, “You lost. You strove with the man Jesus and you failed. You couldn’t make him sin. Yet, he has paid the debt of my sins. You cannot accuse me. I have Jesus. If you are to accuse me, you must accuse Jesus first, and I know you can’t, because I saw you lose to him in the wilderness.” That is the confidence that Jesus’ victory gives us. It gives us confidence to withstand the devil’s accusations against even our most grievous sins. This is not brazenness or impenitence over our sin. Rather, this is confidence in Jesus’ victory over Satan, in the success of his passion and death over our sins. It is confidence that Jesus’ blood washes us clean and that God’s promise of forgiveness is true.  
The seed of the serpent also is at enmity with the Seed of the woman, Jesus Christ. Of course, Satan, being a spirit, cannot have physical seed. His seed are those who believe his lies and obey his will. That is why Jesus told the Jews that hated him that their father was the devil. They were obedient to Satan. Those who are obedient to Satan are at enmity with Christ. But those who are obedient to God are at peace with him. Adam was disobedient to God and brought us into enmity with God. So, our obedience to God must bring us into reconciliation with God.  
Yet, how can we be obedient to God? An obvious answer is to follow the Ten Commandments. Yet, how do we do this? When we look at Satan’s temptation of Jesus, we see that he tempts Jesus to break the first three commandments. By telling Jesus to turn stones into bread, he was tempting Jesus to despise God’s Word, which is breaking the Third Commandment. Jesus resists temptation by saying that man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God. By selectively edition Scripture, Satan tried to tempt Jesus into testing God by leaping from the pinnacle of the temple. This would be breaking the Second Commandment, “You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God.” And finally, by tempting Jesus with the glory of the world in order to get him to worship Satan, he tempted him to break the First Commandment, “You shall have no other gods.”  Yet, Jesus correctly declared that you should worship and serve the Lord God alone. These three commandments make up the First Table of the Law, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, strength, and mind.”  
Jesus perfectly teaches us how to resist temptation and be obedient to God. However, even with Jesus’ perfect example, the commandment still depends on us doing it in order to be obedient. Yet, we do not accomplish it. We fail to be perfectly obedient by our works. The only way we can be truly obedient is through faith in Jesus’ obedience. The Commandments demand love. We cannot love God if he hates us. We can only love him if he loves us. And we can only receive his love through faith in Christ Jesus, who was obedient on our behalf. It is through the obedience of faith that we are rescued from the oppression of Satan. And it is through walking in faith in Christ Jesus that we trample Satan under our feet. Amen.  
 
 
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Lead Us Not into Temptation

3/2/2020

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Picture
James Tissot, Temptation of Jesus in the Wilderness, 1886-94, MetMuseum.org, Public Domain
Invocavit (Lent 1) 
Gen. 3:1-21; Matthew 4:1-11 
Pastor James Preus 
Trinity Lutheran Church  
March 1, 2020 
 
And Lead us not into temptation.  
What does this mean?  
God tempts no one. We pray in this petition that God would guard and keep us so that the devil, the world, and our sinful nature may not deceive us or mislead us into false belief, despair, and other great shame and vice. Although we are attacked by these things, we pray that we may finally overcome them and win the victory. 
 
Jesus teaches us to pray in the Lord’s Prayer that our heavenly Father would lead us out of temptation. This is an important petition. We must not think that temptation is no big deal or that because we have the forgiveness of sins that it doesn’t matter whether we fall into temptation. Temptation leads to false belief, despair, and other great shame and vice. It was falling for temptation by our first parents that plunged our human race into sin and death. The Apostle warns, “Therefore let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed lest he fall. No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.” (1 Corinthians 10:12-13) And so it behooves us to pray to God for aid against temptation, so that we do not fall into a worse condition than we were in before we had Jesus.  
God tempts no one. The tempter himself is Satan. In our Old Testament and Gospel lessons we heard how Satan tempted our first parents and won and how this same Satan tempted our Lord Jesus and failed. Jesus then became the perfect high priest, being tempted like us in every way, except without sin (Heb. 4:15). These were two very different outcomes, yet the old tempter didn’t change his technique. In both cases, Satan did what he always does. He lied.  
“Did God really say...”, the serpent asked. He knew full well what God had said, yet, you’ll notice that he does not ask if God said what he actually said. He doesn’t ask if God really said that they were forbidden to eat of the tree that was in the midst of the garden, the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Rather, he asked whether God forbad them from eating from any of the trees. He tricked Eve into engaging with him, but she was unprepared. The lies kept spewing from the liar’s mouth until Eve and her husband forgot the command of the Lord.  
Likewise, Satan lied to Jesus every step of the way. Yet, Jesus did not consider the devil’s lies. He didn’t weigh them against sound reason. Rather, he responded with the holy Scriptures, the Word of God, which St. Paul calls the Sword of the Spirit (Eph. 6:17). Of course, Jesus did not need to quote Scripture and say what was written. Jesus is the incarnate Word Himself, the Son of God. He certainly could have driven Satan off immediately. Yet, Jesus purposefully used a weapon that each of us has at our disposal in order to teach us how to fight against Satan.  
In the first temptation Satan attacks the Third Commandment, which teaches us to fear and love God, so that we do not despise preaching and God’s word, but hold it sacred and gladly hear and learn it. Again, Satan is sly. He tells Jesus to prove that he is the Son of God by turning stones into bread. Jesus is hungry. He hasn’t eaten in forty days. And he certainly has the power to turn stones to bread or even raise up children for Abraham. Yet, Jesus knows that he does not prove himself to be the Son of God by satisfying his bodily hunger, but by doing the will of his Father, who sent him.  
This teaches us that there is nothing more important than hearing and learning the Word of God. “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.” This isn’t hyperbole. You need to hear God’s Word more than you need to eat. In the Lord’s Prayer, we are taught to pray six petitions that have to do with our spiritual needs. Yet, we are taught only to pray one petition that concerns all our needs of the body. Yet, we think our bodily needs are more important. Satan frequently and with much success tempts Christians to consider their jobs, investments, property, and all other stuff more than hearing, learning, and conforming to the Word of God! It is God’s Word that gives us faith in Christ. God’s Word gives us the Holy Spirit. God’s Word gives us eternal life. Yet, we seek after bread, which perishes.  
In the second temptation the Liar attacks the Second Commandment, “You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God.” What does this mean? We should fear and love God so that we do not curse, swear, use satanic arts, lie, or deceive by His name, but call upon it in every trouble, pray, praise, and give thanks.” Satan in this temptation uses the Word of God. Yet, he misuses it. He perverts it, cutting it up and putting it back together. God indeed promises the protection of angels, but Satan leaves out the phrase, “to guard you in all your ways.” (Psalm 91:11) Satan means for Jesus to put God to the test, which Scripture clearly forbids (Deut. 6:16).  
Satan uses such a trick on us today. Then he tempted Jesus to throw himself off the pinnacle of the temple. Now he tempts us to thrust ourselves into licentious sins. To behave licentiously means to behave unrestrained by the law, as if you have a license to sin. Satan misuses the Gospel itself, the greatest Word from God, to persuade Christians into un-Christian behavior. Scripture teaches us that we are saved by God’s grace apart from our works. And because Jesus died for the sins of the whole world, God’s grace will never run out. Where sins increase, so grace abounds all the more (Romans 5:20-21). And what does the tempter do with this beautiful Gospel message? He asks, “Are we to continue in sin that grace may abound?” Even more, he asserts this! He convinces Christians that their sins cannot harm them, so long as they have a superficial knowledge of Christ. And he encourages Christians to continue in fornication, adultery, drunkenness, rivalry, slander, hatred, and any sin under the sun, with the false promise of rescue you from your sins even if you do not repent. “Cast yourself down into the abyss of sin! Don’t hold back! He’ll command his angels!” Yet, such reckless behavior would be to put God to the test. Christians must fight temptation and repent of their sins daily.  
The tempters final test attacks the First Commandment, “You shall have no other gods.” This seems like a wild attempt of a desperate fool. Who would bow down to Satan? Yet, imagine all the kingdoms of the world and all their glory. Such a vision would certainly instill awe and wonder in any of us. And how quickly people turn from worshiping God in order to gain even the smallest portion of this world’s wealth.  
We truly behave like addicts. The addict chases a temporary pleasant feeling and keeps running back to it over and over again until he is left empty, broken, with ruined relationships, no job, and utterly unsatisfied. And then the addict continues to chase after that drug that ruined his life in the first place. And this is how we behave as we strive after earthly treasures that moth and rust destroy and thieves break in to steal. It is as Paul Gerhardt wrote in his hymn, “What is all this life possesses?/ But a hand Full of Sand/ That the heart distresses.” And so, we need to learn to turn from the lies of earthly riches and bow down only to the true God in heaven.  
Jesus did a good job countering all the devil’s attacks. He effectively used the Holy Scriptures to foil the tempters power. Yet, as you’ve no doubt picked up, Jesus is a lot better at this than we are! He went three for three! How many times has the devil scored on you since you’ve woken up this morning? Indeed, it would be a sad and tragic case if Jesus came to earth and strove with Satan simply to show us how it’s done.  
Although, we Christians try to use God’s Word to resist temptation and by the power of the Holy Spirit we are indeed successful against Satan, we do not always stand victorious. We let our guard down. We fall for his tricks. We behave like soldiers putting down their shields and taking off their armor in the middle of the battlefield, oblivious to the myriad of arrows zinging around us. We underestimate the danger of temptation. But remember, Satan is like a snake. If he can fit his head in, he can fit his entire body in as well. If you give the devil an inch, your treacherous heart may betray you and give him a mile.  
And then the devil enters into the next stage of his attack. He accuses. Yes, the same miserable being that tricked you into sinning against your God then accuses you of sin and he tells you that you cannot be saved by grace. You’ve soiled it. You must make atonement for your sins. Or perhaps, even despair.  
Yet, Jesus did not strive in the wilderness with Satan for his own sake. And he didn’t do it simply to give us an example to follow. Rather, our Lord who so successfully used Scripture to battle Satan fulfilled Scripture itself; a portion of Scripture Satan knew quite well, because it was to him that these words were first spoken:  
I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel.” (Genesis 3:15) 
Jesus Christ himself is the seed of the woman, born of the Virgin Mary. He has come to bruise the head of Satan and win a total victory. Jesus defeats Satan by his perfect obedience to God the Father. Jesus withstands the temptations of the devil in our place. He is the only human being who has never sinned. And Jesus suffered the price for our sins. That is what God meant when he said that Satan would bruise Christ’s heal. Jesus was indeed crucified after Satan enticed Judas to betray him and the chief priests to cry for his blood. Yet, Jesus’ wound was only temporary. After making full atonement for all sins he was raised from the dead. Jesus’ wound has healed. He is victorious over Satan. Satan’s wound will never heal. He is judged.  
Jesus said “Begone, Satan.” and Satan departed. We too have the authority to say those powerful words. After Adam and Eve failed to cover up their sins with fig leaves and got expelled from the Garden of Eden, God clothed them with the skin of an animal. You must slaughter an animal to take its skin. This foreshadowed the work Christ would do for us. Jesus offered himself up as a blameless sacrifice in order to clothe us with his righteousness. Scripture says, “For in Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith. For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ.” (Gal. 3:26-27) 
Through faith in Christ Jesus we share in Christ’s victory. The evil foe, who has no equal on this earth is no match to us. Christ Jesus has given us a little word that can fell him. We are baptized into Christ the victor. Christ Jesus has washed away our sins. We are forgiven. Satan cannot harm us. Amen.  ​
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    Rev. James Preus

    Rev. Preus is the pastor of Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church in Ottumwa, IA. These are audio and text of the sermons he preaches at Trinity according to the Historical Lectionary. 
    You can listen to sermons in podcast format at 
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