Crosspoint Church | Georgetown, TX

Led to Be Tempted!

Devotions this week are based on Week 1 of Temptation to Triumph: Temptation (WATCH HERE)


Matthew 4:1-2 “Then Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil.”

 

That phrase is startling. Jesus was not merely led into solitude. He was led to be tempted.

The Spirit’s purpose was not accidental exposure to danger but intentional confrontation with the enemy. Before Jesus preached a sermon, healed the sick, or called a disciple, He faced the adversary. The mission of redemption would require more than compassion and power. It would require obedience under temptation.

Why would the Spirit lead Him there?

Because salvation would not be accomplished only by dying for sinners. It would also require living faithfully where sinners fail. From the beginning, humanity’s story had been marked by temptation. In Genesis, the serpent approached Adam and Eve not with force but with suggestion. “Did God really say?” The fall began with doubt and culminated in disobedience.

If Jesus is the second Adam, then He must stand where the first Adam fell. The Spirit leads Him to the very battleground that defined humanity’s ruin. This is not recklessness. It is redemption unfolding.

Notice that Jesus does not seek temptation, nor does He avoid it. He enters it in obedience. There is holy intentionality here. The Father is not trying to see whether the Son might sin. The Father is displaying that the Son will not. The testing reveals the perfection already present.

Temptation exposes allegiance. Will the Son trust the Father’s provision? Will He rely on the Father’s timing? Will He worship the Father alone? Each question echoes Eden. Each response of Jesus writes the salvation story.

The Spirit leads Jesus into temptation because temptation is where victory must be won. The cross will deal with the penalty of sin. The wilderness begins to deal with the obedience that sin required. Where Adam grasped, Jesus refuses. Where Israel grumbled in the desert, Jesus trusts. Where we waver daily, He stands firm.

This means that when we face temptation, we are not observing a distant example. We are witnessing our salvation being secured. Jesus resists not only to model righteousness, but to fulfill it on our behalf.

There is comfort in this truth. The Spirit did not lead Jesus into temptation to destroy Him but to demonstrate Him. What looked like vulnerability was actually the unveiling of perfect trust. The battle was real, but so was the obedience.

Lent calls us to consider why temptation exists in our lives. It is not merely an inconvenience. It is a revealing. It shows what we trust and whom we worship. Yet unlike Christ, we often falter. Our hope is not that we will perfectly resist. Our hope is that He already has.

The Spirit led Him to be tempted so that when we are tempted, we would have a faithful Savior who understands our weakness and has overcome in our place.

Reflect: How does knowing that Jesus was intentionally led to confront temptation deepen your understanding of His mission?  In your current struggles, what might God be revealing about your trust and allegiance?
Prayer:  Lord Jesus, You did not avoid the battle that I so often lose. You entered temptation willingly and stood firm. Thank You for obeying where I have failed. Strengthen my trust and shape my heart through every trial, knowing that Your victory is already mine. Amen.

 

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