Read Luke 4:5–8
ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“The kingdom of the world has become the Kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he will reign forever and ever.” (Revelation 11:15 NLT)
Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we will conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

Part 2: The Altar of Allegiance. After forty days of fasting, Jesus stands at the edge of exhaustion. Hunger presses in. The wilderness has already tested body and will. It is there—when strength is thin and clarity costly—that the devil shifts the terrain of temptation. No crude appeal to appetite now. No stones into bread. Instead, the horizon widens.
Luke tells us that in a single moment Jesus is shown all the kingdoms of the world. Authority. Glory. Influence. Infrastructure. Culture. Law. Security. The visible machinery by which human life is ordered and protected. The offer is not small. It is sweeping. “I will give you all this authority and glory… if you worship me.”
The condition is quiet but absolute. Just bow.
The temptation here is not toward moral failure. It is toward misdirected allegiance. The devil does not demand that Jesus renounce God outright. The request is subtler: reorder your loyalty. Blend devotion. Hold the Kingdom in one hand and power in the other. Secure the world now and sort out the theology later.
It is the temptation of expediency.
If Christ rules, suffering could be avoided. If Christ governs, justice could be implemented immediately. If Christ commands, reform could begin from the inside. The cross becomes unnecessary. The wilderness becomes a prelude to immediate triumph.
Just bend.
Allegiance is rarely tested when it costs nothing. It is tested when compromise promises results.
Jesus’ refusal is neither flippant nor theatrical. It carries the weight of real temptation and the firmness of settled obedience: “You must worship the Lord your God and serve only God.” Only. No divided loyalty. No shared throne. No quiet accommodation.
Where architecture in Babylon tempted Nebuchadnezzar to boast, the allure of empire in the wilderness tempts Jesus to bow. But Christ does not grasp what is offered. Christ refuses what seems efficient. The path of obedience remains narrow and costly.
Revelation later proclaims what the desert foreshadows: “The kingdom of the world has become the Kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ.” The kingdoms will belong to Christ—not because Christ secured them through compromise, but because Christ remained faithful through suffering. What Satan offers prematurely, God fulfills in time.
Allegiance determines destiny.
We do not stand on desert cliffs, but we face quieter versions of the same offer. We bow when belonging feels safer than truth. We bow when influence seems too valuable to risk. We bow when protecting access becomes more important than protecting integrity. We bow when loyalty to tribe, institution, or nation begins to eclipse loyalty to Christ.
The altar of allegiance is not always dramatic. It often disguises itself as wisdom. It whispers about effectiveness and stability. It argues that a small bend now will allow greater faithfulness later.
But worship is revealed by posture. And any power that must be gained by bowing is not the Kingdom of God.
Lent presses this question gently but firmly into our hearts: Where have we negotiated our allegiance to maintain comfort, relevance, or control? Where have we justified subtle compromise because the outcome seemed worthwhile?
Christ stands in the wilderness and refuses to bend. Not because the kingdoms are insignificant, but because devotion cannot be divided. The Kingdom that lasts forever cannot be received through misdirected worship.
Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.
THOUGHT OF THE DAY
Allegiance is revealed not by what we claim to believe, but by where—and to whom—we bow.PRAYER
Faithful God, you alone are worthy of our worship. In a world that tempts us to bend for power or approval, steady our hearts in undivided devotion. Reveal where our loyalties have drifted and give us courage to stand firm. Strip away every false altar until only Christ remains. Amen.
Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).








