Luke 4:1-13
February 22, 2026, Lent 1
Temptation of Christ
J. Kirk Richards
Jesus is tested in the
desert by Satan.
He
is presented with three temptations:
food,
security, and wealth and power.
I have to tell you, I think I could pass on security
and power.
But it doesn’t matter, because I think I would fail
the first test.
After
40 days in the desert, without food,
I
think I would cave right away.
I could see not eating few days,
technically a healthy person
could survive 60 days without food
but forty days of not eating is a long time.
What harm would it be just to accept a little bit of bread?
I mean forty days without it, Jesus could have
died,
then what good would he be?
How annoying is it that we
have this constant need of food?
Every day, our bodies call for it.
Most of us have it pretty easy,
we can just go down to the store and buy it,
but what if you don’t have the money for it?
what if you don’t have the access or the resources?
What if you’re in a desert of any kind?
Just the prospect of being
without food is terrifying
to a lot of people, the fear of not being able to
eat
or of not being able to feed your children drives
a lot of people to do a lot of things they normally
wouldn’t.
The compromises that people make to survive are soul-snatching.
We make compromises in our
own lives for the sake of food.
For
that piece of bread.
We’ve
all done things we haven’t wanted to do just to keep a job.
And
good, honest people can be driven to do the unimaginable.
Listen
to this story:
In 1922, a town called Herrin
in southern Illinois
was
a mining town and there was a nationwide mine workers strike.
The
owner of the mine near Herrin went along with the strike,
but
he was deep in debt, and as the strike went on, he saw
the
price of coal rise and rise and he couldn’t resist the temptation.
So
he decided to just move out what had already been dug up
and
was waiting on rail cars to ship.
This
was in violation of what had
previously
been agreed on with the union.
To do it, he decided to bring in non-union workers.
And
he hired armed guards to monitor the mines.
He
brought in poor people needing work from Chicago
who
probably had no idea that they were breaking a strike,
or
what exactly they were walking into.
After the first train car
of coal left the mine,
Two
striking union workers tried to get into to the mine
and
they were shot and killed by the guards.
The next day, the union workers came on
masse.
They
started shooting into the mine trapping the workers
the
sheriff was called, but he did nothing to curb the violence.
A
truce was attempted. The strike breakers sent out
a
mine guard with a broomstick and a white apron on it.
They began marching the
workers, the guards, and the
superintendents
into Herrin which was 5 miles away.
The
plan was for the strike breakers and the guards
and
the superintendent to get to Herrin and to leave the state.
Along the way, a mob of
people gathered around them.
The
mob became angry, as mobs do,
yelling
and taunting the strike breakers.
Someone
yelled that the best way to stop a
strike
breaking was to kill all the strike breakers.
And
then it started.
There are a lot of terrible,
terrible details.
But
in the end, 23 people were killed:
18
workers, 4 guards, and the mine superintendent
while
a mob of over 1000 people, men women and children
watched,
encouraged, and even joined in.
The Herrin Massacre.
There’s
a painting depicting it in the Columbus Art Museum.
I’m
not showing it, because it’s too disturbing.
One reporter that had come to witness
tried to give
an
dying man some water, and he was told that if he did
he
wouldn’t live to see the next day.
Six people out of the mob were
arrested,
the
first two trials, which were held outside Herrin,
but
in another town in Southern Illinois,
ended
in acquittals. The prosecution gave up after that
and
no one was ever prosecuted.
In 1978, journalism
students from
Southern Illinois University went to
Herrin
to interview people who remembered it.
Most
Herrin people who were there
said
they were not ashamed of the incident.
Most
said you couldn’t blame them for doing what they did.
One
man said, “they were taking the bread out of our mouths.”
Do you see yourself in that
story?
I would guess most of us would not.
I didn’t when I first heard the story. I was aghast.
But the juries that
acquitted the people could
apparently saw themselves in this story.
And the people years on said
they would have made the same choice.
“They were taking the bread out of our mouths.”
That
whole town of people were not sociopaths.
I’m sure their parents taught them right from wrong.
The murder rate in Herrin after that was
not higher than anywhere else.
We all know that standing up for ourselves in
the face of injustice is the right thing to do.
I think unions have been a great asset to working
people.
But somewhere along the
line, they compromised.
They compromised their integrity, their compassion,
and their humanity.
They gave into the temptation for bread,
then they wanted to secure their jobs,
then they went for power with violence.
We
might look down on the compromise they made.
But the truth is, we make compromises with the devil
every day.
If you’ve ever been in a situation where
you might lose everything you’ve had,
you know what desperation can lead us to,
the things we would trade to have it all back
the way it was before.
Many of us have stayed in
bad home
situations for economic reasons.
I think each one of us has, at one time or another,
worked
against our best judgment,
or
allowed one of our boundaries to be broken
or
kept our mouth shut in order to keep a job and keep
that
food flowing into our homes. We compromise.
And
just being a part of the world
make us part of the great compromise.
We turn our heads and look away as bodies pile
up and wars are fought in our name.
We live with the fact that in the supposed richest
country
in the world, people can’t afford health care and
people go hungry and can’t afford homes.
As part of society, we make compromises with evil.
We turn away because it makes life easier than
paying attention.
It all starts with that one
little compromise.
Giving into that one fear.
And before we know it,
we’ve given our soul away to the devil.
We start with the temptation of food,
and once we take that, it leads to security,
and inevitably it leads to domination and power.
And then we belong to the devil.
Even if we still worship God.
We are right now in a rash
of certain
Christians who want to claim political power.
We’re not the first nation to do this and
this is not the first time in history for sure,
but it seems like this Christian claim of absolute
political power is getting as close as it’s ever
been.
A self-proclaimed Christian
Nationalist pastor,
Doug Wilson, was invited to speak at the pentagon
this week,
speaking to the military at the newly-instituted
monthly prayer services there.
(all the prayer services have been Christian,
and all were Christian Nationalist by the way)
Wilson has defended slavery,
saying it wasn’t so bad,
believes that women shouldn’t have
the right to vote apart from their husbands,
wants homosexuality to be illegal,
and he advocates for a full-on Christian theocracy,
which punishes people for not following.
Disturbing to say the
least.
But the most disturbing thing is, he’s not alone in
these thoughts today.
Now I don’t think that any
of these people
started out saying they want to be megalomaniacs.
They don’t begin their public lives wanting
power and control like an evil villain in a
super-hero movie.
They start out with that
little temptation.
With those little “what ifs” that the devil feeds us:
“If you don’t do this, you could starve.
what if they take what’s yours, protect your family,
it’s about your survival, it’s just some bread,
it’s rightfully yours, take it. It’s about your
security,
it’s about your future, they’re trying to take away
your heritage,
your faith, your way of life,
you’re doing this for God.
You’re doing this to defend Jesus.”
And eventually, you’re
calling for the arrest
of people who think or worship differently than you.
You’re hating your enemies, you’re looking at the
sliver
everyone else’s eye and ignoring your own,
you’re making captives instead of setting them free,
you’re scolding the 5000 for not fending for
themselves,
instead of feeding them. Basically you’re defying
everything
that Jesus ever stood for.
Jesus
had been in the desert without food for forty days
without shelter and without anything to rely on.
Jesus is at his worst and most vulnerable
He’s in the middle of nowhere and doesn’t know
when the next time he will be able to eat is.
He could have taken that bread.
But he didn’t.
Surely Jesus could have
been trusted
to take control of all the kingdoms of the world
and run them justly and fairly.
But he didn’t.
If God had wanted us to
take over political
empires and have Christian theocracies,
then this story would have ended very differently.
But Jesus didn’t take over the Roman Empire
and impose his will on everyone through political
control.
God didn’t want that.
God didn’t want that for Jesus,
and Jesus rejected it because he knew it was what the
devil wants.
And the devil wants it because he knows
it will lead to our destruction.
It’s not about the wrong
party having control
It wouldn’t be better if they had some
reasonable, more sympathetic policies.
Exercising earthly dominion in the name of Jesus
runs contrary to everything that Jesus stood for.
It never works out, because it’s not of God.
Preacher and author,
Barbara Brown Taylor wrote:
Jesus was not killed by atheism and anarchy.
He was brought down by law and order
allied with religion—which is always a deadly mix.
Beware those who claim to know the mind of God
and are prepared to use force, if necessary, to make
others conform.
Beware those who cannot tell God’s will from their
own.
We
have a savior who has stood up to the powers of this world.
Who did not use his power for his own sake.
We have a savior who would not compromise with
Satan.
He gave up his comfort, his power, and his position
he gave up his short cut and his sure thing,
and he traded it for us and for our salvation.
Jesus
knew that this world is hopelessly tied up with the devil
Jesus knows that we are slaves to sin and cannot
free ourselves
And Jesus knew that God loves us all the same,
so Christ gave us a path.
A path of service to others, a path of forgiveness,
A path to life instead of death.

