The temptation that was presented by Satan
to our Saviour upon the exceeding high mountain is one of the
leading temptations which humanity must meet. The kingdoms of
the world in their glory were offered to Christ by Satan as a
gift upon condition that Christ would yield to him the honor
due to a superior. Our Saviour felt the strength of this temptation,
but He met it in our behalf and conquered. He would not have
been tested upon this point if man were not to be tried with
the same temptation. In His resistance, He gave us an example
of the course that we should pursue when Satan should come to
us individually to lead us from our integrity.
No man can be a follower of Christ and
yet place his affections upon the things of the world. John in
his first epistle writes: "Love not the world, neither the
things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the
love of the Father is not in him." Our Redeemer, who met
this temptation of Satan in its fullest power, is acquainted
with man's danger of yielding to the temptation to love the world.
Christ identified Himself with humanity
by bearing the test upon this point and overcoming in man's behalf.
He has guarded with warnings those very points where Satan would
best succeed in his temptations to man. He knew that Satan
would gain the victory over man unless he
was especially guarded upon the points of appetite and the love
of worldly riches and honor. He says: "Lay not up for yourselves
treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where
thieves break through and steal: but lay up for yourselves treasures
in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where
thieves do not break through nor steal: for where your treasure
is, there will your heart be also." "No man can serve
two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other;
or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot
serve God and mammon."
Here Christ has brought before us two masters,
God and the world, and has plainly presented the fact that it
is simply impossible for us to serve both. If our interest in,
and love for, this world predominate, we shall not appreciate
the things, which, above all others, are worthy of our attention.
The love of the world will exclude the love of God and make our
highest interests subordinate to worldly considerations. Thus
God will not hold so exalted a place in our affections and devotions
as do the things of the world.
Our works will show the exact extent to
which earthly treasures have our affections. The greatest care,
anxiety, and labor are devoted to worldly interests, while eternal
considerations are made secondary. Here Satan receives of man
that homage which he claimed of Christ but failed to obtain.
It is the selfish love of the world which corrupts the faith
of the professed followers of Christ and makes them weak in moral
power. The more they love their earthly riches, the further they
depart from God, and the less do they partake of His divine nature
that would give them a sense of the corrupting influences in
the world and the dangers to which they are exposed.
In Satan's temptations it is his purpose
to make the world very attractive. Through love of riches and
worldly honor he has a bewitching power to gain the affections
of even the professed Christian world. A large class of professedly
Christian men will make any sacrifice
to gain riches, and the better they succeed in their object the
less love they have for precious truth and the less interest
for its advancement. They lose their love for God and act like
insane men. The more they are prospered in securing riches the
poorer they feel because they have no more, and the less will
they invest in the cause of God.
The works of those men who have an insane
love for riches show that it is not possible for them to serve
two masters, God and mammon. Money is their god. They yield homage
to its power. They serve the world to all intents and purposes.
Their honor, which is their birthright, is sacrificed for worldly
gain. This ruling power controls their minds, and they will violate
the law of God to serve personal interests, to increase their
earthly treasure.
Many may profess the religion of Christ
who love not and heed not the letter or principles of Christ's
teachings. They give the best of their strength to worldly pursuits
and bow down to mammon. It is alarming that so many are deceived
by Satan and their imaginations excited by their brilliant prospects
of worldly gain. They become infatuated with the prospect of
perfect happiness if they can gain their object in acquiring
honor and wealth in the world. Satan tempts them with the alluring
bribe, "All this will I give thee," all this power,
all this wealth, with which you may do a great amount of good.
But when the object for which they have labored is gained, they
do not have that connection with the self-denying Redeemer which
would make them partakers of the divine nature. They hold to
their earthly treasures and despise the self-denial and self-sacrifice
required for Christ. They have no desire to part with the dear
earthly treasures upon which their hearts are set. They have
exchanged masters; they have accepted mammon in the place of
Christ. Mammon is their god, and mammon they serve.
Satan has secured to himself the worship
of these deceived souls through their love of riches. The change
has been so imperceptibly made,
and Satan's power is so deceptive, so wily, that they are conformed
to the world and perceive not that they have parted with Christ
and are no longer His servants except in name.
Satan deals with men more guardedly than
he dealt with Christ in the wilderness of temptation, for he
is admonished that he there lost his case. He is a conquered
foe. He does not come to man directly and demand homage by outward
worship. He simply asks men to place their affections upon the
good things of this world. If he succeeds in engaging the mind
and affections, the heavenly attractions are eclipsed. All he
wants of man is for him to fall under the deceitful power of
his temptations, to love the world, to love rank and position,
to love money, and to place his affections upon earthly treasures.
If he secures this, he gains all that he asked of Christ.
The example of Christ shows us that our
only hope of victory is in continual resistance of Satan's attacks.
He who triumphed over the adversary of souls in the conflict
of temptation understands Satan's power over the race and has
conquered him in our behalf. As an overcomer He has given us
the advantage of His victory, that in our efforts to resist the
temptations of Satan we may unite our weakness to His strength,
our worthlessness to His merits. And, sustained by His enduring
might under strong temptation, we may resist in His all-powerful
name and overcome as He overcame.
It was through inexpressible suffering
that our Redeemer placed redemption within our reach. In this
world He was unhonored and unknown, that through His wonderful
condescension and humiliation He might exalt man to receive heavenly
honors and immortal joys in His kingly courts. Will fallen man
murmur because heaven can be obtained only by conflict, self-abasement,
and toil?
The inquiry of many a proud heart is: Why
need I go in humiliation and penitence before I can have the
assurance of my acceptance with God, and attain the immortal
reward? Why is not the path to heaven less difficult and more
pleasant and attractive? We refer all these doubting, murmuring
ones to our great Exemplar while
suffering under the load of man's guilt and enduring the keenest
pangs of hunger. He was sinless, and more than this, He was the
Prince of heaven; but in man's behalf He became sin for the race.
"He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for
our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon Him; and
with His stripes we are healed."
Christ sacrificed everything for man in
order to make it possible for him to gain heaven. Now it is for
fallen man to show what he will sacrifice on his own account
for Christ's sake, that he may win immortal glory. Those who
have any just sense of the magnitude of salvation and of its
cost will never murmur that their sowing must be in tears and
that conflict and self-denial are the Christian's portion in
this life. The conditions of salvation for man are ordained of
God. Self-abasement and cross bearing are the provisions made
by which the repenting sinner is to find comfort and peace. The
thought that Jesus submitted to humiliation and sacrifice that
man will never be called to endure, should hush every murmuring
voice. The sweetest joy comes to man through his sincere repentance
toward God because of the transgression of His law, and faith
in Christ as the sinner's Redeemer and Advocate.
Men labor at great cost to secure the treasures of this life. They suffer toil and endure hardships and privations to gain some worldly advantage. Why should the sinner be less willing to endure, to suffer, and to sacrifice in order to secure an imperishable treasure, a life that runs parallel with the life of God, a crown of immortal glory that fadeth not away? The infinite treasures of heaven, the inheritance which passes all estimate in value, which is an eternal weight of glory, must be obtained by us at any cost. We should not murmur at self-denial, for the Lord of life and glory endured it before us. Suffering and deprivation we should not avoid, for the Majesty of heaven accepted these in behalf of sinners. Sacrifice of ease and convenience should not cause one thought of repining, because the world's Redeemer accepted all these in our behalf. Making the largest estimate of all our self-denials, privations, and sacrifices, it costs us far less in every respect than it did the Prince of life. Any sacrifice that we may make sinks into insignificance when compared with that which Christ made in our behalf.