
Readings:
• Dt 26:4-10
• Ps 91:1-2, 10-11, 12-13, 14-15
• Rom 10:8-13
• Lk 4:1-13
“The whole story of the Temptation is misconceived,” wrote Monsignor Ronald Knox, “if we do not recognize that it was an attempt made by Satan to find out whether our Lord was the Son of God or not.”
In so writing, he echoed many of the Church Fathers, who pondered the question of what Satan knew and what he wished to accomplish in tempting Jesus in the desert. St. Ephrem the Syrian wrote, “He tempted Jesus because a definite sign of Christ’s divinity had not yet been given from heaven.” Yes, Ephrem noted, Satan was aware of Jesus’ baptism, but thought the true identity of Jesus couldn’t be known until he was tested in spiritual combat, through temptation.
It is a point worth contemplating on this first Sunday of Lent for three reasons: temptation reveals the nature of our enemy, it reveals the reality of our situation, and it reveals the identity of the sons and daughters of God.
The enemy has many names, including Beelzebul, the evil one, the ruler of the demons and this world, the serpent, and the tempter. He is not a metaphor or a myth, but a real creature, a fallen angel. Pope Paul VI, in an audience titled, “Confronting the Devil’s power” (Nov. 15, 1972), said that refusing to acknowledge the devil’s existence or to explain him away as “a pseudo-reality, a conceptual, fanciful personification of the unknown causes of our misfortunes” is a complete rejection of Scripture and Church teaching.
Ironically, the refusal of so many—including not a few Catholics—to admit the true identity of the devil is itself a dark triumph for the great deceiver.
The name “the devil,” comes from the Greek word diabolos (Latin, diabolus), which means “slanderer” or “accuser.” He seeks to accuse and slander each of us before God in his relentless desire to destroy souls. In doing so, he has a certain advantage, namely, that on our own merits we have no real defense against his accusations. The reality of our situation is stark: we are sinners who often give into temptation and, in doing so, make ourselves subjects of the ruler of this world.
This fact is part and parcel of Jesus’ forty days in the desert. His time there was a purposeful re-enactment of the forty years the Israelites spent wandering in the desert. But whereas the Israelites failed repeatedly to obey, trust, and worship God, Jesus overcame the devil’s attempts to have him disobey, distrust, and deny God. “At the heart of the temptations,” notes Pope Benedict XVI in Jesus of Nazareth, “as we see here, is the act of pushing God aside because we perceive him as secondary, if not actually superfluous and annoying, in comparison with all the apparently far more urgent matters that fill our lives.”
We are rarely tempted to flatly deny the existence of God or to publicly curse him. Rather, we are tempted to gradually replace God, the highest good, with lesser goods: food, comfort, safety, possessions, and position. People rarely go from Christian to atheist in a matter of days or weeks. As Benedict points out, the devil is just as pleased when we demand that God cater to our wishes as he is when we reject God altogether. They are, in the end, not so different, especially when it comes to destroying the life of grace.
“But,” some protest, “Jesus had an advantage: he is God!” Yet all who are baptized into Christ have put on Christ (cf. Rom 6). We are children of God because, by the work of Jesus, we are filled with the Holy Spirit. Today’s epistle states what is required in the face of temptation and trials: confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead.
In facing the enemy and rejecting temptation, Jesus revealed himself. Lent is our opportunity to do the same, in the name and power of the Lord.
(This “Opening the Word” column originally appeared in the February 21, 2010, edition of Our Sunday Visitor newspaper.)

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Saint Ephrem makes a plausible testament that Christ’s refusal to surrender to temptation revealed his divinity. But did it? Msgr Knox argues what seems more plausible, rather it was Satan’s effort “to find out” whether he was the son of God. Or was it also an attempt to seduce Jesus?
In any event Satan apparently was not convinced since the text tells us When the devil finished, he left him to await another opportunity. Were those future opportunities Peter’s remonstration over Jesus’ foretelling of his suffering and death? At Gethsemane and Jesus’ please to forego crucifixion? Was Satan during these temptations ever aware that Jesus was God from God, Light from Light, True God from True God?
In support of Ephrem resistance to sin is Godlike. The importance of that is underscored by Carl Olson, “In facing the enemy and rejecting temptation, Jesus revealed himself. Lent is our opportunity to do the same, in the name and power of the Lord”. That ability to resist speaks directly to Christ, the source of knowledge and strengthening grace during our battle against the daemonic and his overtures to sin. It also reveals the dismay of Satan in Christ’s resurrection, revealing without further question, as witnessed by the centurion that he was indeed the Son of God.
Thank you Carl for another awesome commentary. Your closing words say it all, “in the name and power of our Lord ” Just as Jesus commanded His Apostles.
Then Jesus approached and said to them, “All power in heaven and on earth has been given to me.
Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age.” Mt.28
It’s worthy of note that the centurion, a Roman officer, likely tried in battle familiar with suffering and death was convinced of Christ’s divinity, not by his overt preaching, miracles, rather by the the silent manner in which he professed his faith, his immense courage, and his exclamations of merciful forgiveness for his tormentors by which he suffered and died.
Did Satan know Christ was true God? He could not possibly fathom this possibility; holy almighty Power could not possibly descend this low if everything else is possible for Him. One thing the devil does not have or understand is LOVE. “Love never fails” (Cor 13:8)”. Evil personified can be as cruel and vicious as he wants to be because he is already condemned, so we better stay vigilant and cling to Him our Savior Lord and God.
Prove to Me that you are the God of love by not excluding me from your Triune equality…
That is, there is no subordinating hierarchy between the willing Creator and His willed creation…as in, I will not serve. Instead, prove the divine and Triune humility by simply sharing yourself equally with me. The subtlety of Evil.
Best not to even negotiate with temptation in even small things, gradually. The Fall is our chosen but almost instinctive pride of place even before any overt sin. Our consented will toward small selected exemptions or carve-outs, or wedges, or “jots and tittles”…