Commentary
After the baptismal declaration, the Spirit leads Jesus into the wilderness for testing by the devil. Across three appeals tied to hunger, temple protection, and rule over the kingdoms, the tempter presses Jesus to prove sonship by seizing power on false terms. Jesus answers each assault from Deuteronomy, refusing self-directed provision, rejecting spectacle that would test God, and repudiating dominion gained through worship of Satan. Matthew thus presents him as the obedient Son who succeeds in the wilderness where Israel failed.
Matthew 4:1-11 presents Jesus as the faithful Son who, under Spirit-led testing, defeats the devil by steadfast obedience to God's word, thereby defining true messianic sonship over against self-serving power, spectacle, and idolatrous rule.
4:1 Then Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. 4:2 After he fasted forty days and forty nights he was famished. 4:3 The tempter came and said to him, "If you are the Son of God, command these stones to become bread." 4:4 But he answered, "It is written, 'Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.'" 4:5 Then the devil took him to the holy city, had him stand on the highest point of the temple, 4:6 and said to him, "If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down. For it is written, 'He will command his angels concerning you' and 'with their hands they will lift you up, so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.'" 4:7 Jesus said to him, "Once again it is written: 'You are not to put the Lord your God to the test.'" 4:8 Again, the devil took him to a very high mountain, and showed him all the kingdoms of the world and their grandeur. 4:9 And he said to him, "I will give you all these things if you throw yourself to the ground and worship me." 4:10 Then Jesus said to him, "Go away, Satan! For it is written: 'You are to worship the Lord your God and serve only him.'" 4:11 Then the devil left him, and angels came and began ministering to his needs.
Observation notes
- The unit is tied tightly to the baptism: the Father's declaration, 'This is my Son,' is immediately followed by repeated satanic challenges, 'If you are the Son of God.
- Jesus is led by the Spirit into the place of testing; the wilderness trial is not outside divine sovereignty, though the devil is the tempter.
- The three replies all begin from written revelation, and all three quotations come from Deuteronomy's reflection on Israel's wilderness experience.
- The first temptation addresses legitimate bodily need, but the issue is not whether bread is good; it is whether Jesus will act independently of the Father's directive.
- The second temptation is sharpened by the devil's own use of Scripture, showing that biblical citation can be distorted when severed from covenantal intent and broader context.
- The temple setting adds public and symbolic force: the temptation is not merely to seek protection, but to force a spectacular display that would test God.
- The third temptation brings the underlying issue into the open: the path offered is kingship without obedience, glory without the cross, and rule through idolatrous compromise.
- Jesus' final response names the tempter 'Satan,' making explicit the adversarial identity already implied by 'the devil' and 'the tempter.
Structure
- 4:1-2 sets the scene: the Spirit leads Jesus into the wilderness, where fasting creates the context for satanic testing.
- 4:3-4 first temptation: the devil targets Jesus' sonship through hunger, urging him to use power for self-provision; Jesus answers with Deuteronomy 8:3.
- 4:5-7 second temptation: the devil relocates the scene to the temple and cites Scripture to promote presumptuous self-endangerment; Jesus answers with Deuteronomy 6:16.
- 4:8-10 third temptation: the devil offers world dominion in exchange for worship; Jesus rejects him decisively with Deuteronomy 6:13.
- 4:11 closes the encounter: the devil departs and angels minister to Jesus, confirming divine care after obedient endurance.
Key terms
peirazo
Strong's: G3985
Gloss: to test, tempt, try
The word carries both trial and temptation dimensions. In this context the devil seeks to induce disobedience, while the event also functions as a proving of Jesus' filial faithfulness.
diabolos
Strong's: G1228
Gloss: slanderer, accuser
Matthew presents the conflict as personal and moral, not merely internal struggle. Jesus' ministry begins with confrontation against a real evil opponent.
huios tou theou
Strong's: G5207, G2316
Gloss: Son of God
The temptations are not random moral tests; they probe what kind of Son and Messiah Jesus will be.
gegraptai
Strong's: G1125
Gloss: it stands written
The perfect tense presents Scripture as a settled, authoritative word governing conduct in the moment of trial.
proskyneo
Strong's: G4352
Gloss: to bow down, worship
The climactic temptation exposes idolatry as the heart of satanic rule and clarifies that messianic kingship cannot be pursued through false worship.
latreuo
Strong's: G3000
Gloss: to serve, render sacred service
The term broadens the issue beyond a single act of bowing; total allegiance and devoted service are reserved exclusively for the Lord.
Syntactical features
purpose infinitive after divine leading
Textual signal: 'was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil'
Interpretive effect: The wording presents the testing as part of the divine economy without making God the tempter. It clarifies that the encounter serves a redemptive and revelatory function.
conditional challenge formula
Textual signal: 'If you are the Son of God' in 4:3 and 4:6
Interpretive effect: The repeated condition functions rhetorically to pressure Jesus to prove sonship by autonomous display. The issue is less doubt about identity than a challenge to enact sonship wrongly.
adversative answer pattern
Textual signal: 'But he answered' followed by Scripture in each exchange
Interpretive effect: The repeated pattern sets Jesus' obedience over against the devil's proposals and gives the dialogue a formal disputation shape governed by the written word.
scriptural counter with 'again'
Textual signal: 'Again it is written' in 4:7
Interpretive effect: Jesus interprets one text by another, refusing a selective reading of Psalm 91. This shows that faithful exegesis requires canonical balance, not isolated citation.
imperatival dismissal
Textual signal: 'Go away, Satan!' in 4:10
Interpretive effect: The final command marks the climax of the conflict. Jesus does not merely evade temptation; he authoritatively rejects the tempter once the demand for worship is voiced.
Textual critical issues
wording of Jesus' dismissal in 4:10
Variants: Some witnesses read a longer form akin to 'Get behind me, Satan,' while others have the shorter 'Go away, Satan.'
Preferred reading: Go away, Satan!
Interpretive effect: The shorter reading fits the immediate scene of dismissal without importing wording associated with a different Matthean context.
Rationale: The shorter form is strongly supported and best explains the rise of an expanded reading through assimilation to Matthew 16:23 or Luke's parallel language.
Old Testament background
Deuteronomy 8:2-3
Connection type: quotation
Note: Jesus' first response comes from Moses' explanation of Israel's wilderness hunger. Matthew presents Jesus reliving Israel's testing but succeeding where Israel failed.
Deuteronomy 6:16
Connection type: quotation
Note: The second response recalls Massah, where Israel tested the Lord. Jesus refuses to force God's hand or demand proof through spectacle.
Deuteronomy 6:13
Connection type: quotation
Note: The third response grounds exclusive worship and service in covenant loyalty to the Lord alone, directly exposing the satanic demand as idolatry.
Psalm 91:11-12
Connection type: quotation
Note: The devil cites this psalm selectively to justify reckless behavior. Jesus' reply shows that promises of protection cannot be turned into warrants for presumption.
Exodus 16-17
Connection type: pattern
Note: The bread and testing themes echo Israel's wilderness failures over provision and trust, intensifying the contrast between disobedient Israel and the faithful Son.
Interpretive options
Force of 'If you are the Son of God'
- A real expression of doubt about Jesus' identity.
- A rhetorical challenge meaning 'Since you are the Son of God, act in a way that proves it on my terms.'
Preferred option: A rhetorical challenge meaning 'Since you are the Son of God, act in a way that proves it on my terms.'
Rationale: The baptism has just declared Jesus' sonship, and the temptations aim not mainly to discover identity but to redefine how sonship is exercised—through self-assertion rather than obedient trust.
Nature of the temple and mountain scenes
- The devil physically transports Jesus to literal locations.
- The scenes are visionary or apocalyptic in mode rather than straightforwardly physical.
Preferred option: The text leaves the precise mode unstated, and the main interpretive weight rests on the reality of the temptations rather than on reconstructing the mechanics.
Rationale: Matthew narrates the events simply and concretely, yet some features, especially seeing 'all the kingdoms of the world,' make dogmatism about mechanics unnecessary. The theological force is unchanged either way.
Why Matthew's order differs from Luke's
- Matthew preserves the historical sequence and Luke rearranges topically.
- Luke preserves the historical sequence and Matthew arranges climactically.
- Both Evangelists may arrange the traditional material for theological-literary purposes.
Preferred option: Both Evangelists may arrange the traditional material for theological-literary purposes.
Rationale: The Synoptic differences do not undermine historicity. Matthew's order moves compellingly toward the climax of explicit worship versus idolatry, which suits his narrative purpose.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The baptismal declaration in 3:17 controls the reading of 'Son of God' in this unit; the temptations test the mode of sonship just announced.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: The text mentions hunger, angels, temple, kingdoms, and mountain imagery, but these details must serve the main stated issue of testing and obedience rather than become speculative symbolism.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Jesus must be read as the unique Son and Messiah, yet also as the representative obedient man. Either dimension alone would flatten the scene.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The moral force is real, but the passage is not first a generic manual for resisting temptation; it is a revelation of Jesus' filial obedience that then informs discipleship.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: The wilderness carries typological weight through Israel's history, but the narrative should not be dissolved into mere symbol. Matthew presents a real testing event with representative significance.
election_covenant_ethnic
Relevance: medium
Note: Jesus' Deuteronomy citations place him within Israel's covenant story as the faithful representative who succeeds in Israel's place and for Israel's calling.
Theological significance
- Jesus' sonship is shown in obedience to the Father, not in turning power toward self-provision, spectacle, or compromise.
- The Spirit's leading into the wilderness places severe testing within God's providence without making God the tempter.
- Jesus' replies show Scripture functioning as decisive authority in conflict, while the exchange over Psalm 91 shows how easily Scripture can be twisted when torn from its proper context.
- By answering from Deuteronomy's wilderness teaching, Jesus stands in Israel's testing and remains faithful where Israel did not.
- The offer of the kingdoms unmasks the deepest issue in the final temptation: dominion sought through idolatry.
- The angels' ministry at the end confirms God's care, but only after obedient endurance rather than manipulated rescue.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The three exchanges are tightly ordered. The devil moves from hunger to temple spectacle to world rule; Jesus answers with Scripture that reorders those pressures under dependence, trust, and exclusive worship. The repetition of 'It is written' gives the scene its cadence and marks written revelation, not immediate need or visible opportunity, as the governing authority.
Biblical theological: The scene binds together the voice at baptism, the wilderness setting, and the start of kingdom ministry. Jesus answers from texts that interpret Israel's wilderness failures, so his obedience is not merely private virtue but representative faithfulness within Israel's story.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes that life is governed by more than material supply, that divine protection cannot be forced by spectacle, and that authority severed from right worship is fundamentally corrupt. Appetite, safety, and rule are all real goods, but none may be pursued outside God's order.
Psychological Spiritual: The temptations work by pressing legitimate desires through a distorted account of identity: satisfy hunger now, secure certainty by dramatic proof, gain rule without costly obedience. Jesus resists by receiving identity from the Father's word rather than performing it for the tempter.
Divine Perspective: The Father does not have to be compelled to prove his care. The ministry of angels comes after the refusals, not before them, showing that divine faithfulness is real even when obedience passes through deprivation and pressure.
Category: character
Note: God alone is worthy of worship and service; every rival claim to ultimate allegiance is exposed as false.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The Spirit's leading and the angels' ministry frame the testing within God's sovereign care.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: God rules his Son's path by the written word, and Jesus treats that word as decisive.
- The testing is Spirit-led and yet genuinely satanic.
- Sonship is affirmed at baptism and then proved in obedient endurance rather than immediate display.
- God promises care, yet faith refuses to convert that promise into a demand for spectacle.
Enrichment summary
Matthew presents the wilderness testing as a contest over sonship inside Israel's scriptural story. Jesus answers from Deuteronomy, the book that interprets Israel's own wilderness formation, and thereby appears as the faithful Son in the place where Israel proved unfaithful. The three proposals are not random: bread urges self-provision apart from the Father's word, the temple urges public spectacle under a misused promise, and the kingdoms offer dominion through idolatrous compromise. The scene therefore clarifies what sort of Messiah Jesus will be—one whose royal vocation is governed by trust, obedience, and exclusive worship.
Traditions of men check
Treating the temptations as a simple self-help template for overcoming bad habits.
Why it conflicts: That approach reduces the unit to moral technique and neglects Matthew's central concern with Jesus' messianic sonship and representative obedience.
Textual pressure point: The repeated challenge 'If you are the Son of God' and the dense use of Deuteronomy tie the scene to Christology and Israel's story, not merely private spirituality.
Caution: The passage does inform believers about resisting temptation, but that application must come after its Christological and redemptive-historical function is recognized.
Using Psalm 91 or similar promises as guarantees for reckless faith or manufactured miracles.
Why it conflicts: The devil himself models a promise-claiming approach severed from covenant intent and moral obedience.
Textual pressure point: Jesus counters the Psalm citation with Deuteronomy 6:16, refusing to test God by forcing miraculous intervention.
Caution: This correction should not be used to weaken genuine confidence in God's protection; the issue is presumption, not trust.
Assuming visible success, influence, or political dominion can be pursued through spiritually compromising alliances so long as the goal is good.
Why it conflicts: The third temptation explicitly offers rule through an act of false worship, and Jesus rejects the bargain absolutely.
Textual pressure point: 'All these I will give you' is refused because worship and service belong to God alone.
Caution: The text does not forbid all cultural or political engagement; it forbids gaining rule by violating exclusive allegiance to God.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: representative_headship
Why It Matters: Jesus faces the devil not only as an individual but as the Son who stands within Israel's story. His Deuteronomy quotations signal that the wilderness is being revisited, this time with obedience instead of failure.
Western Misread: A modern reading often treats the episode mainly as a set of personal coping strategies for temptation.
Interpretive Difference: The passage first reveals Jesus as the faithful representative; its value for discipleship flows from that prior claim.
Dynamic: covenantal_loyalty
Why It Matters: The replies about bread, testing God, and worship come from covenant instruction shaped by Israel's wilderness experience. The issue is not bare self-control but fidelity to God under pressure.
Western Misread: Readers may reduce the scene to inner psychology and miss its covenantal texture, especially in the temple and worship scenes.
Interpretive Difference: The final temptation becomes a demand for treasonous allegiance, and the temple temptation becomes an attempt to force God's hand rather than an act of bold faith.
Idioms and figures
Expression: If you are the Son of God
Category: other
Explanation: In context the phrase functions as a challenge, not a neutral inquiry. The pressure is to display sonship by acting independently of the Father's pattern.
Interpretive effect: It frames the temptations as disputes over how sonship will be lived, not merely over whether Jesus possesses it.
Expression: Man does not live by bread alone
Category: idiom
Explanation: The saying does not dismiss bodily need. It insists that life is sustained under God's speaking and ordering, not by material provision taken as ultimate.
Interpretive effect: The first temptation turns on trust and obedience, not on whether food is good.
Expression: throw yourself down
Category: symbolic_action
Explanation: From the temple height, the act would amount to a dramatic attempt to force divine protection in public view.
Interpretive effect: The scene concerns presumptuous religious display, not ordinary confidence in God's care.
Expression: all the kingdoms of the world and their grandeur
Category: hyperbole
Explanation: The wording presents universal dominion in sweeping form, regardless of the precise mechanics of how the vision or sight is conveyed.
Interpretive effect: It keeps the focus on the scale of the offer and the idolatrous terms attached to it, rather than on reconstructing geography.
Application implications
- Times of testing are not, by themselves, evidence of divine abandonment; Jesus enters this wilderness under the Spirit's leading.
- Real needs do not authorize disobedient shortcuts, even when the need is as basic as hunger.
- Scripture must be read in context and with canonical balance, since the devil can cite a true text for a false end.
- Do not manufacture crises to force proof of God's favor or protection.
- Any path to influence or success that asks for divided allegiance must be refused at once.
Enrichment applications
- Temptation often approaches through legitimate goods offered on disordered terms; the issue is not only desire but allegiance.
- Refuse Bible use that isolates a promise from the wider will of God.
- Do not confuse dramatic display with faithfulness; in this scene sonship is shown in obedience before public ministry begins.
Warnings
- Do not flatten the passage into a bare example story; Matthew presents a decisive revelation of Jesus' identity and vocation.
- Do not over-speculate about the mechanics of transportation, mountain sightlines, or visionary states; Matthew's emphasis lies elsewhere.
- Do not isolate the quotations from Deuteronomy from Israel's wilderness history, since that backdrop governs the force of Jesus' answers.
- Do not treat the devil's scriptural citation as legitimating proof-text duels detached from context; Jesus' 'again it is written' corrects that method.
- Do not import later debates about impeccability in a way that cancels the reality of the testing as narrated.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not let Second Temple or temple symbolism overshadow the passage's plain emphasis on obedient refusal under testing.
- Do not import later Christological debates in a way that drains the narrative of real temptation or turns the scene into abstract doctrinal sparring.
- Do not flatten Jesus' representative role into a denial of the passage's direct moral relevance; the order is Christ first, discipleship second.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Reading the episode chiefly as a practical method for resisting temptation.
Why It Happens: Jesus' use of Scripture is memorable, so readers often move straight to personal application.
Correction: Matthew first presents the obedient Son whose wilderness faithfulness defines his messianic vocation and recalls Israel's story.
Misreading: Treating Psalm 91 as a license for reckless acts done in the name of faith.
Why It Happens: The promise of angelic protection can be lifted from its setting and turned into a slogan.
Correction: Jesus answers with another text from Deuteronomy, showing that promises of care do not authorize testing God.
Misreading: Reducing the third temptation to a warning about ambition or greed alone.
Why It Happens: The language of kingdoms and grandeur naturally draws attention to power.
Correction: The decisive issue is worship. The offer is political only on the far side of an idolatrous demand.
Misreading: Insisting on one reconstruction of the temple and mountain scenes as though the text itself settles every mechanical detail.
Why It Happens: Readers want to know how Jesus was shown all the kingdoms of the world.
Correction: Matthew's emphasis falls on the reality and meaning of the temptations, not on explaining their exact mode.