Jesus, as in
Matthew 4 and
Mark 1, travels into the desert, led there by the
Spirit, and
fasts for forty days. The
New American Standard Bible suggests that Jesus was "led around by", or "under the influence of" the Spirit in the wilderness. He is confronted by
Satan, who tempts (or tests) him. 'Tested' is the preferred wording of several
modern translations, e.g. the
Contemporary English Version, Expanded Bible and
New Testament for Everyone. • First, Satan commands him to turn stones into bread. Jesus replies, "Man shall not live by bread alone" (4 RSV), quoting
Moses from
Deuteronomy 8:3:
Man shall not live by bread alone. The words
but by every word of God, which reflect the Deuteronomy text (
by every word that proceeds from the mouth of the LORD), are added in the
Textus Receptus but absent from critical texts of the
Greek New Testament. • Secondly, Satan shows Jesus "...all the kingdoms of the world" (5) and tells him that he can have them all if he falls down and worships him. Jesus replies with a further quote from Deuteronomy 6:13, "It is written: 'You shall worship the Lord your God, and him only shall you serve.'" (8) • Finally, Satan takes Jesus to the top of the
Temple of Jerusalem and quotes
Psalm 91:11–12 as a criterion for a test of favor with
God, to which Jesus quotes Deuteronomy 6:16, "... You shall not tempt the Lord your God." (12). This narrative is also found in
Matthew 4:1–
11, but in Matthew the order of the second and third temptations is reversed. This was most probably in
Q if that
hypothesis is correct; perhaps their copies of Q were in a different order? This difference in orders presents a challenge for
redactional criticism. It is unclear whether in Q, if it existed, the order was originally the same as Luke's and Matthew changed it to have it end on a mountain, a common motif of Matthew, such as
Matthew 5:1 and
Matthew 28:16, or Luke changed it to have the temptations end in
Jerusalem. Luke ends his gospel in Jerusalem in
Luke 24. Most scholars believe Matthew's order was the order Q used.
Verse 13 Luke then says that Satan left Jesus "for a season" or "until an opportune time". Satan appears later in
Luke 22, entering
Judas and leading him to betray Jesus.
Raymond Brown sees his return in when Jesus says to those arresting him "But this is your hour, and the power of darkness". The late 19th-century Anglican cleric
Frederic Farrar, in his commentary on Luke for the
Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges, argues that this does not mean Jesus faced no other temptations during his life, quoting
Bonaventure's view that "he endured temptations, too, at other times". ==Jesus returns to Galilee (verses 14–15)==