The Savior vs The Satan: 3 Words

 

Sermon Summary

This sermon explored how belief and conviction are formed by examining the first recorded words of Satan and the first recorded words of Jesus in Scripture. Building on last week’s discussion of belief, conviction, and compromise, Pastor Curt reframed the question: What do we need to believe in order to have a deep conviction that does not compromise? The message showed that the core battle is not primarily about behavior, but posture—specifically, suspicion versus submission to God’s Word.

Satan’s first words in Genesis introduced suspicion: questioning God’s Word, presuming on God’s character, and offering a version of godlikeness without God. Each statement subtly invited reinterpretation rather than outright rebellion. In contrast, Jesus’ first recorded words revealed submission: confidence in God’s Word, obedience to God’s will, and complete dependence on what God has spoken. From His childhood declaration in the temple, to His baptism, to His response to temptation in the wilderness, Jesus consistently trusted, fulfilled, and lived by God’s Word.

The sermon emphasized that temptation succeeds when we grow suspicious of what God has said, leading us to revise truth to suit ourselves. True obedience flows from submission, not confusion. To grow in conviction and resist compromise, believers must examine whether their posture toward Scripture is one of suspicion or surrender.

Main Points to Consider This Week

  • Core Contrast: The spiritual battle is fundamentally suspicion vs. submission—not merely morality or behavior.

  • Three Words of Satan (Genesis 3):

    • “Did God actually say…?” — introduces doubt about the interpretation of God’s Word.

    • “You will not surely die.” — promotes presumption and minimizes God’s warning.

    • “You will be like God…” — offers independence, authority, and wisdom apart from God.

  • Three Words of Jesus:

    • “I must be in My Father’s house.” — confidence and clarity about God’s Word and identity.

    • “It is fitting…to fulfill all righteousness.” — full obedience to God’s will without revision.

    • “It is written…” — complete dependence on every word from God.

  • Questions to ask yourself:

    • Where am I suspicious of God’s Word rather than submissive to it?

    • Have I revised God’s commands under the phrase “God knows my heart”?

    • Do I treat obedience as optional or as a response to grace?

    • Am I trusting God’s promises while dismissing His warnings?

    • What posture—submission or suspicion—defines my daily walk?

Scripture References Used

  • Genesis 3:1-5

  • Luke 2:46–49

  • Matthew 3:13–15

  • Matthew 4:3–4

  • Exodus 29:4

  • Numbers 4:1–3

  • Luke 3:23

  • Job 1:9

  • Revelation 12:10

  • 2 Peter 3:9

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Suspicion vs Submission: A Layer Deeper

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