Ep. Mark 1:12–13 The Temptation of Jesus
- Dwaine C. Senechal

- Aug 28
- 4 min read
Updated: Sep 14

Immediately the Spirit drove Him into the wilderness. And He was there in the wilderness forty days, tempted by Satan, and was with the wild beasts; and the angels ministered to Him. (Mark 1:12–13 NKJV)
Into the Wilderness
Mark doesn’t waste words. Right after the baptism, right after the Father’s voice called Jesus the beloved Son, the Spirit drove Him into the wilderness. Not gently leading — the word Mark uses is forceful, almost like being pushed out into exile.
The Judean wilderness is no gentle place. It’s barren, rocky, and hostile. The days scorch, the nights cut with cold. Mark adds a detail the others don’t — Jesus was “with the wild beasts,” a reminder of how exposed He was. And He was there for forty days without food. Luke adds, “He ate nothing,” which means this wasn’t just a symbolic fast. By day 40 the human body is at the edge of survival.
And water? That’s the part that hit me as I thought more about it. The desert doesn’t give you water freely. At best, there are hidden springs in caves or the rare seasonal stream. If He had none, He wouldn’t survive more than a week. If He had only a little, He would have been in constant dehydration — dizzy, weak, his body shutting down. Either way, by the end He would have been gaunt, dry-mouthed, staggering. This wasn’t a comfortable spiritual retreat. This was survival at the edge of death.
How Real Were These Temptations?
This raises the question: how real were these temptations? James says God cannot be tempted, and yet Hebrews says Jesus was tempted in every way like us. For years, I assumed maybe His temptations weren’t quite the same as mine. But then I read Hebrews more closely. It says He didn’t come in the nature of angels, but in the nature of Abraham’s children. That means He faced life in the same fragile body we do.
Matthew and Luke tell us what happened in those forty days. The temptations weren’t random — they cut to the root of being human. First, the drive to satisfy the body at any cost — turning stones to bread. Second, the pull of what dazzles the eyes — the kingdoms and their splendor. Third, the urge to put yourself at the center — leap from the temple and demand God’s rescue.
And I realized: isn’t that the heart of every temptation we face? Our appetites. Our desires. Our pride. Different forms, same roots. That’s why Hebrews can say He was tempted in every way like us. He didn’t face less — He faced the whole of it.
Different traditions explain the mystery differently. Western Christians often talk about His two natures — human and divine. In His humanity He felt the pull; in His divinity He never sinned. Eastern Christians emphasize the one Christ who fully entered our struggle, yet whose will was perfectly one with the Father. Either way, the point is the same: the temptations were real, and Jesus bore them to the breaking point without yielding.
What This Means for Us
This story reminds me that testing often comes right after calling. The Father had just declared Him the beloved Son — the very next moment, the wilderness. That’s not an accident.
And it tells me something about my own temptations. They’re not unique. I may think, “No one knows what I’m going through,” but Scripture insists otherwise. The same roots run through us all — the cravings of the body, the lure of what glitters, the drive to put ourselves at the center. Jesus faced them all. But where I collapse, He stood.
And here’s the part that lingers for me: He stood when He was weakest. When He was
hungry, thirsty, dehydrated, surrounded by beasts. When every nerve in His body was screaming for relief. He stood faithful there. Which means He can stand with me in my weakness too.
That doesn’t make the wilderness easy. But it means I’m not alone in it.
Additional Reading & References
Parallel Gospel Accounts
Matthew 4:1–11 — three temptations spelled out, each answered with Deuteronomy.
Luke 4:1–13 — same temptations but in different order; Satan departs “until an opportune time.”
Mark 1:12–13 — short and urgent, with the unique note about “wild beasts.”
Old Testament Background
Israel tested in the wilderness — Deuteronomy 8:2.
Moses’ 40 days — Exodus 34:28.
Elijah’s 40 days — 1 Kings 19:8.
Psalm 91:11–12 — quoted by Satan during the temptation.
Key Greek Word
ἐκβάλλει (ekballei), Strong’s G1544 — “to drive out, to compel.” Mark says the Spirit drove Jesus into the wilderness, a forceful word.
East and West on Christ’s Temptation
Western view: Jesus has two natures; in His humanity He felt temptation, in His divinity He could not sin.
Eastern Orthodox view: Jesus, the incarnate Word, fully entered our human struggle, yet His will was perfectly one with the Father.
Both agree: The temptations were real, not staged — and His victory matters for us.
For Further Reading
Hebrews 2:14–18; 4:14–16 — Jesus was made like us in every way, tempted in every respect, yet without sin, able to help us in our weakness.


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