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In Matthew 4:1-13 and Luke 4:1-11, Jesus was in the desert for 40 days and tempted by Satan. Of particular interest is the first temptation.

Luke 4:3-4 (NLT)

Then the devil said to him, “If you are the Son of God, tell this stone to become a loaf of bread.”
But Jesus told him, “No! The Scriptures say, ‘People do not live by bread alone.’”

Satan full well knew who Jesus was! There couldn't have been any doubt in Satan's mind as to Jesus' identity, as opposed to the Pharisees and Sadducees, who simply refused to believe. No, Satan isn't really asking Jesus to prove Himself. Rather, he has some other motive...

What was Satan's motive in asking Jesus for a sign of His identity?

I consider myself non-denominational, but I grew up Wesleyan, so the closer answers are to that, the better. I won't turn away Catholic or Orthodox answers though.

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5 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted

The recorded three temptations of Christ mirror the steps Satan used to bring sin into the world in the first place:

If you are the Son of God ...

vs Genesis 3

Did God actually say ...

Also, like with the first sin, it is related to food.

Second:

If you are the Son of God, jump off ...

vs

You will not surely die

God didn't mean what He said ("I even quoted a passage to prove it!")

And lastly:

if you will worship me ...

vs

you will be like God ...

Questioning God's authority.

Satan is questioning whether Jesus was who He said He was (and whom His Father had just attested to at the baptism) - He was trying to get Jesus to fail in His earthly life so He couldn't be our perfect sacrificial substitute.

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3  
Wow! Never noticed that before. Thanks. – Benjol Oct 2 '12 at 8:53
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You may just have given me a sermon for some day. Thanks! – Affable Geek Oct 2 '12 at 12:37
@AffableGeek - you're welcome ... I can't claim to have noticed it on my own - but I found it really neat :) – warren Oct 2 '12 at 13:39
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that's an awesome parallel. It really shows the temptation to Jesus on a personal level, as the Son of God, and yet also the more important (to us anyways) connection between Christ and Adam. Brilliant, +1 :) – Thomas Shields Oct 2 '12 at 15:44

One of Satan's biggest tricks is to try and confuse you about who you are, and whose you are.

Satan will wait until you are at your weakest point in life and then come to you with questions about your life... your calling... and your ability to do for God the Father.

You must know that you have been given the power to become a son of God... Just as Jesus was his son in whom God was WELL PLEASED.

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I agree with what you're saying, but this answer would be a lot stronger if you could back it up. meta.christianity.stackexchange.com/questions/692/… – David Stratton Mar 17 at 20:34

God doesn't have to prove his power since his word is active and alive. Jesus mission was to die and after three days be risen, and if wanted a proof then let it proven on the cross. Therefore, the (3) temptation represent (3) days which make God not to be a magical spirit for which Satan won't understand. If he speak, it's surely come to pass.

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Welcome to the site. This doesn't really answer the question. It sounds more like a good comment. – Narnian Feb 7 at 20:38

Why did Satan tempt Jesus in the desert?

Because Satan hates Christ and wants him to fall.

What was Satan's motive in asking Jesus for a sign of His identity?

Because Jesus was going to save people by living a sinless life and dying for them. Satan didn't want that. He was tempting Jesus to fulfill a lust of using God's divine power to satisfy his hunger so that Jesus would fall. Satan could then make Jesus not able to save other on account that he was no longer sinless.

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2  
hunger is not equal to "lust" - there is nothing inherently wrong with satisfying one's bodily needs: the problem would have been in Christ selfishly used Divine power to meet a need for Himself when it was not necessary for the furtherance of the Kingdom of God – warren Oct 1 '12 at 23:21
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@warren Thanks for catching that, updated my answer. – dongle26 Oct 2 '12 at 0:23
I'm not sure that Satan knew that Jesus was going to die for us. – Benjol Oct 2 '12 at 8:53
@Benjol - perhaps not, but He certainly knew Jesus was God's Son – warren Oct 2 '12 at 14:14
@dongle26 Nice start of an answer! Can you back up your claims with scripture or even something outside of scripture? – user1054 Oct 2 '12 at 14:35

I don't read that as Satan asking Jesus to prove his identity; rather, it reads as a temptation. "You have power. You're very hungry. Use your power to take care of your personal problems."

As Paul points out,

For we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin. (Hebrews 4:15)

Satan absolutely did know who Jesus was, and why he was there. And he also knew that Jesus had free will and the ability to make his own choices. (In fact, we have one recorded instance where Jesus directly stated that his will was in opposition to the will of the Father, in the Garden of Gethsemane, (Matthew 26:38-44,) but he chose to do his Father's will and not his own.) And he knew that Jesus needed to be perfect to complete the work that he had come to accomplish.

So if he could find any way of tempting Jesus to step off the path, even once, it would have destroyed God's plan, which is exactly what Satan wanted. So Satan tempted him, trying to get him to use his power for physical desires, for fame, and for wealth and earthly power.

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