Temptation

After a 40-day period of fasting, the devil challenges Jesus to make bread for himself out of stones (Matthew 4:1-11). It is the temptation to help himself. Jesus refuses.

The devil then tries to persuade him to force God to act by throwing himself off the roof of the temple. Jesus also rejects this with the words: ‘You shall not put the Lord your God to test’.

Last but not least, the devil wants to offer Jesus a shortcut and spare him all suffering. ‘I will give you all these things’. But Jesus orders the devil to go away (verse 10). Then the angels serve Jesus.

We are also challenged in these three things: to wait for God’s time, not to put God under pressure, but to endure unchanging situations and not to take shortcuts. We have a God who carries us through. God brings his angels into play at his own time.

The important thing is how Jesus reacts. He says again and again: It is written.The confuser even quotes the Bible. But Jesus points out that a passage must not be removed from the overall context of the Bible.

Lead us not into temptation

Jesus teaches us to pray: ‘Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil’?

The original temptation to mistrust God and to impute negative motives to him comes from the tempter. ‘Did God really say …’.

The real break between man and God lies in the fact that man questions whether God means well with his instructions.

You often have to look behind a story in order not to impute negative motives to God.

God wants to save us from our self-imposed downfall and prevent abuse.

‘Lead us not into temptation’. This means: ‘God help us to trust you in all situations’.

With the prayer ‘Lead us not into temptation’, we acknowledge our weakness (need for help) and distance ourselves from false self-confidence. We are aware that we need the Holy Spirit because he helps us to trust in God.

God connects Samaria with Jerusalem

Although baptised, the believers in Samaria have not yet received the Holy Spirit. Only through the prayer of the apostles from Jerusalem do they receive the Holy Spirit.

This is where something new begins: not only Jews believe in Jesus, but also half-Jews.

This could have been the reason why the Holy Spirit only came to the believers in a conscious step and through the apostles Peter and John. The laying on of hands by the apostles connects the Jesus movement in Samaria with the church in Jerusalem.

Paul describes the sign of the Holy Spirit as follows: “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy and peace; patience, kindness and goodness; faithfulness, forbearance and self-control (Galatians 5:22-23).

The Holy Spirit also gives us a longing for God: “Lord, I long for you!” (Psalm 25:1).

He gives a childlike trust in God. Galatians 4:6: “But because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying out, ‘Abba, Father!”

And an inner certainty (Romans 8:16: “God’s Spirit himself gives us the inner certainty that we are God’s children.”)

more from Acts: https://jesus-news-israel.net/tag/acts/