

#Go into the wilderness full
Christ embodies everything the Lord created Adam-and all humans-to be, and in Him alone we find our full humanity.Īll of these fulfillments happened under the superintendence of our Creator. In Jesus, therefore, God has created a new Israel and a new humanity. He never sinned, thereby guaranteeing the restoration of God's fallen creation. Yet, whereas Adam fell despite having every advantage in a lush garden, Jesus persevered in the harsh wilderness and never gave in to temptation (Gen. Satan, as a serpent, tempted our first parents in Eden, and Satan tempted Jesus in the wilderness (Gen. But Scripture also calls Adam the "son of God" (Luke 3:38), so Christ is also the last Adam, the obedient Son who succeeded where Adam failed. Hosea 11:1 tells us that old covenant Israel was God's son by adoption, which further connects Jesus, the Son of God by nature, to Israel's history. Furthermore, Elijah, a representative old covenant prophet, also stayed forty days in the wilderness so, it is appropriate that the chief Prophet, Jesus Christ, parallels Elijah's life by spending forty days in the wilderness (1 Kings 19:1–8 Mark 1:13). Thus, we see another parallel in that Jesus, the representative of Israel, also spent forty days in the wilderness at a critical point in His ministry (Ex. Second, Moses, the representative of Israel, spent forty days on Mount Sinai at a critical point in his ministry. Another parallel exists between Israel's testing for forty years in the wilderness and Jesus' being tempted for forty days in the same place (Deut. There is an apparent parallel between Jesus' passing through the water before going into the wilderness, which suggests that we are to see Jesus as the new Israel who fulfills God's purposes for His old covenant people. Anyone familiar with the Old Testament will quickly see the many parallels between Jesus' time in the wilderness and the history of Israel. What followed was our Lord's temptation by Satan, an event that is one of the most important keys for unlocking the meaning of the work of Christ. Immediately after Jesus' baptism, the Holy Spirit "drove him out into the wilderness" (Mark 1:12).
