BURKITT : | Lu 4:1 | Lu 4:2 | Lu 4:3 | Lu 4:4 | Lu 4:5-8 | Lu 4:9-13 | Lu 4:14-21 | Lu 4:22-24 | Lu 4:25-27 | Lu 4:28-30 | Lu 4:31-37 | Lu 4:38-39 | Lu 4:40-41 | Lu 4:42-44 |
Reference
9 And he brought him to Jerusalem, and set him on a pinnacle of the temple, and said unto him, If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down from hence: 10 For it is written, He shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee: 11 And in their hands they shall bear thee up, lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone. 12 And Jesus answering said unto him, It is said, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God. 13 And when the devil had ended all the temptation, he departed from him for a season. (Luke 4:9-13 KJV)
William Burkitt’s Commentary
Observe here, 1. The power which Satan, by God’s permission, had over the body of our blessed Saviour: he took him up and carried his body through the air, from the wilderness to Jerusalem, and there set him upon one of the pinnacles of the temple.
Learn hence, 1. That Satan, by God’s permission, may have power over the bodies of the best of men.
2. That this exercise of Satan’s power over the bodies of men, is no argument that such persons do not belong to God. Our Saviour himself, who was dear to God, is yet left for a time in Satan’s hands. But though Satan had the power to set him upon the pinnacle of the temple, yet he had no power to cast him down: though Satan’s malice is infinite, his power is limited and bounded; he cannot do all the mischief he would, and he shall not do all he can.
Observe, 2. The sin which Satan tempts Christ to; the sin of self-murder. Cast thyself down.
Learn, that self-murder is a sin which Christ himself was, and the best of his children may be, solicited and tempted to; yet though Satan solicited Christ to the sin, he could not compel him to comply with the temptation.
Thence note, that how much earnestness and importunity soever Satan uses in pressing his temptation, he can only persuade, he cannot compel; he may entice, but cannot enforce.
Observe, 3. The argument which Satan uses to persuade Christ to the sin of self-murder; it is a scripture argument, he quotes a promise: He shall give his angels charge over thee.
What a wonder is here, to see the devil with a Bible under his arm, and with a text of scripture in his mouth! Christ had alleged scripture before to Satan; here Satan retorts scripture back again to Christ. It is written, says Christ; It is written, says Satan.
Learn, that Satan knows how to abuse the most excellent and comfortable scriptures to the most horrid and pernicious ends and purposes. He that had profanely touched the sacred body of Christ with his hand sticks not presumptuously to handle the holy scriptures with his tongue.
Observe, 4. The text of scripture which Satan makes use of: He shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee: Ps 91:11-12 where the doctrine is good, but the application bad. The doctrine is true, that God is pleased to employ his angels for the good of his servants, and particularly for their preservation in times of danger: but see how falsely the devil perverts, misapplies and wrests that sacred scripture. When God promises that his angels shall keep us, it is in all his ways; not in our own crooked paths.
Learn, that although the children of God have the promise of the guardianship of his holy angels, yet then only may they expect their protection, when walking in the way of their duty: He shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways.
Observe lastly, the issue of his combat: Satan is vanquished, and departs from our Saviour. St. Matthew says, The devil left him, and angels came and ministered unto him. Satan is conquered and quits the field.
Teaching us, that nothing like a vigorous resistance of temptation, causes the tempter to flee from us. Satan is both a cowardly enemy, and a conquered enemy; resist him, and he will run.