Sunday, February 17, 2013

Giving In


The Rev. Dr. Skip Ferguson
Manassas Presbyterian Church
Manassas, Virginia
February 17, 2013
First Sunday in Lent
Giving In
Luke 4:1-13

The young man sat at the table gazing out the window.
He looked across the street,
watching workers install a new poster on a large billboard.
image on the poster was of a car –
a luxury car –
a car with a reputation for being among the very best,
and, also, for being among the most expensive.

The young man looked longingly at the car,
enviously,
even covetously.
“If only I could afford a car like that,” he thought.
“If I could afford a car like that,
all doors would be open to me.
People would think I was cool, that I’d made it.
If I had a car like that, I’d have it all.”

The young man was so lost in his thoughts
that he didn’t notice the older man
who had taken the seat across from him.
He too looked out the window;
“Nice car,” he said.
The young man murmured his agreement,
lost in his dreams of possession.

The older man quietly pushed a piece of paper
across the table to the young man,
and held out a pen,
“Make a deal with me, kid and you can have the car…
and, everything that goes along with it.”

The young man looked at the older man
and without even asking a question
he took the pen.
His eyes, his mind, his whole being
were focused on that car.

Images of what his life would be like
carried him away:
dates with beautiful supermodels;
hangin’ at the coolest clubs with celebrities;
wealth, fame –
people pointing at him
eyeing him the same way they looked at
Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, George Clooney.

The young man pulled the piece of paper toward him
and looked for the line where he should sign the document.
But then he took one more look out the window
and at just that moment
the workers uncovered the last part of the poster,
the lower left corner,
which revealed the price of the car.

The young man was stunned.
He had assumed the car had a price tag of
80, 90, even 100 thousand dollars.
But there, in bright red letters two feet high it said,
“$29,000”,
hardly more than a Ford or Chevrolet.

The young man quickly pushed the paper back across the table
and handed the pen to the older man.        
He smiled as he said, “I think I’ve got it.”
The older man, furious in defeat,
instantly vanished in a cloud of sulfur.

This was a television ad that ran during the Super Bowl.
The car company spared no expense producing the ad,
casting the distinguished actor Willem Dafoe as the older man,
the tempter.
The supermodel Kate Upton
and the singer Usher were also featured in the 90-second drama.
And just in case the audience didn’t get it,
the soundtrack was nothing less than the Rolling Stones’
classic song, “Sympathy for the Devil,”
showing no signs of age 45 years after it was first released.
The plot was timeless:
a young man with temptation squarely before him,
about to make a Faustian bargain:
the car, “and everything that goes along with it,”
all for what lawyers would call so tactfully,
“future consideration.”

But the car company saved the young man from the tempter’s power
by setting the price of the car within his reach.
“Set your soul free”, invited an announcer at the end,
set your soul free behind the wheel of this,
and only this, car.

Do you see the irony here?
The young man may not have signed on the dotted line;
he may have sent Willem Dafoe away in a puff of angry smoke,
but he still gave in;
He gave in to temptation.
He gave in to the seduction that the car would somehow
open up a new world for him –
a world of glamor, fame, excitement.

We find temptation all around us,
in front, behind, on either side of us,
everywhere.         
And the temptations that surround us aren’t offered
with knowing smiles by shadowy, sinister figures,
caps pulled low on their foreheads to hide their horns,
pitchforks disguised to look like umbrellas.  

Just like the young man,
we are tempted by money,
by fame,
by power,
by glamor,
by excitement,
by almost anything.
        
There is temptation in even the simplest aspects of life:
“Should I call in today and claim I’m sick
so I can have a day off?”
“Should I listen to the friend who tells me
that I shouldn’t worry about cheating on the exam,
or cheating on my income taxes:
1.    because every else does it;
2.    because I probably won’t get caught;
3.    because no one will be hurt by my cheating;
4.    and besides, it isn’t really that big a deal;
it’s not like I’m robbing a bank.

But when we give into temptation of any kind,
we rob ourselves, we hurt ourselves,
because when we give into temptation,
we turn from God, we turn away from God,
even if just for the briefest moment.

That’s what our lesson teaches us.
This isn’t a lesson about the devil;
this is a lesson about how Jesus calls us to live
by the first of the two Great Commandments,
that we are to:
love the Lord with all our heart,
with all our strength,
with all our minds,
with and, of course, all our soul.
Live this way, Jesus would have us learn,
and we can handle life’s temptations as they come,
strengthened by the Spirit of God,
brushing temptations aside,
as more nuisance than threat,
just as Jesus did in the wilderness.

Read through the pages of both Old and New Testament,
and we can find story after story of temptation.
Time and time again, it is the faithful person
who manages to steer clear of temptation,
while the person of weak faith succumbs.

The Book of Proverbs,
written long before anyone developed the notion,
the idea,
of the character we now call the devil,
warned young men in particular,
of the temptations that were all around them.
warned them that only by faith,
only through faith,
could they hope to steer clear of
those who would lead them to
“forsake the paths of uprightness
and walk in the ways of darkness.”
(Proverbs 2:13)

The Proverbs put it so simply:
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart
for he will make straight our paths.”
(Proverbs 3:5)

The forty days of Lent that lie before us
provide each of us with the opportunity
to reflect on when, …where, …how
we give into temptation.
It is tempting, though, to ignore this opportunity,
to think to ourselves, “I’m okay”;
or perhaps with a little false humility,
to think, “I may not be perfect,
but at least I’m better than most.”

Don’t you see, though, that that is giving into
the irresistibly tempting power of denial,
of giving into the temptation to close our minds to the truth.
But, as Scripture teaches us, if we say we have no sin,
we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us.  

We’re not good at being introspective.
We’re so much better at
pointing the finger at others.
We’re so much more comfortable saying,
“I’m not all that bad,
but I know an awful lot of people who are.”

The strength of Twelve-Step programs is
that they demand an honest look within;
denial is unacceptable.
The first words out of the mouth of newcomer
to a meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous are,
“I’m an alcoholic.”
There is no hope for new life in denial.

Lent invites us to look honestly in the mirror at ourselves,
you at yourself,
me at myself,
to face squarely where we have turned from God and
to acknowledge what temptations repeatedly
and all too easily lead us from God.

It isn’t easy to live faithfully;
especially with so many temptations all around us.
But the life we are to live as disciples of Christ
calls us to face the choices we have before us each day,
acknowledge that very few are clear,
that most of them fall into patches of gray,
and try our best to make the godly choices,
try our best to live by
“Doing what is right and good
in the sight of the Lord”
(Deut 6:18)

Don’t give into the temptation
that giving up French fries or ice cream or chocolate
is all you need to do to observe Lent.
The purpose of Lent is to arouse in each of us
a sense of where we have turned,
a sense of where we’ve given in,
a sense of where we have sinned,
all so that we can we washed clean,
strengthened,
renewed.

All so we can follow more faithfully our Risen Lord,
the One who is the light of the world,
the light that no darkness of any kind
can ever overcome.

AMEN