Luke 4:1-13
Christian
Identity: Being Truly Human
James Sledge March
6, 2022
I think I was in ninth grade when the
musical, Jesus Christ Superstar, burst onto the scene. It was a huge cultural
phenomenon, with some of its songs becoming pop hits. I had the two-album
soundtrack and played it frequently. At the time, there was a certain
subversive quality to the musical that appealed to a young teenager.Briton Rivière, 1840-1920. Temptation in the Wilderness,
from Art in
the Christian Tradition,
a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library
One song that especially appealed to me was a catchy, comic number sung by King Herod when Jesus, freshly arrested, is brought to him for trial. The sarcastic lyrics Herod sings to an unresponsive Jesus include a verse that goes,
So, you are the Christ, you're the great
Jesus Christ
Prove to me that you're divine - change my
water into wine
That's all you need do, and I'll know it's
all true
C'mon, king of the Jews!
Another verse issues a different challenge to Jesus.
So,
you are the Christ, you're the great Jesus Christ
Prove to me that you're no fool - walk
across my swimming pool
If you do that for me, then I'll let you
go free
C'mon, king of the Jews!
I share these lyrics because there was a time when I saw today’s gospel reading as a similar situation. A smug, sarcastic devil, complete with horns and pitchfork, issues challenges to Jesus. “Come on, Jesus. Do a trick for me, and then I’ll believe you really are the Son of God.”
I suppose that my image of the devil became a bit more sophisticated as I grew older, but it was not until I entered seminary that I realized the devil never asks Jesus to prove who he is. His challenges are nothing like those of Herod in Jesus Christ Superstar. The devil in this story knows full well exactly who Jesus is. His challenges don’t ask Jesus to prove anything. Rather they force Jesus to wrestle with just what it means for him to be Son of God.