We can so easily think it is enough to hear, to read, to know, to understand, even to believe … but Jesus said that we need to actually do what He says.
When I preached on the two builders parable that Jesus used to finish up the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7) or the Sermon on the Plain (Luke 6), it struck me that there are some helpful points for preachers in that story.
I’m not going to write about how to preach the parable, but lessons from the parable that may be applicable to us.
The parable is very simple. Two men, two houses, potentially identical in every visible respect, but different in one very significant way: the foundation.
The first man (Luke 6:48) dug down until he got to rock upon which he made the foundation. The second man just built his house on top of the ground (Luke 6:49).
I have absolutely no building experience, and yet I know that the second man was crazy to build the way he did. I have been living for years, and yet I do the “crazy option” with alarming regularity.
Here are a few things for us to ponder:
Just like the Sunday School song, we can easily miss the point of a very easy passage to understand. Jesus is not pointing to himself as the rock on which we must build our lives. That may be true truth, but it is not the truth of this passage.
The point of the story is that the wise builder is the one who hears Jesus and does what he hears. Is there an area of obedience that is missing in your life right now?
We can easily fall into a modified prosperity misunderstanding, just like the Sunday School song: the blessings will come down as the prayers go up! Nice, but not always true.
Jesus said “when.” Jesus said that in this world we will have trouble. As preachers we need to prepare people for the real stuff of life, and we need to live our lives with awareness that trouble will hit us too.
Will we stand firm, or will we stand in a pile of rubble when trouble hits? That depends, according to Jesus, on our doing what he teaches.
All Christians are prone to fall short of the “do” step. Preachers are especially prone to this error. We can so easily think it is enough to hear, to read, to know, to understand, even to believe … but Jesus said that we need to actually do what he says.
This is true in two respects:
Peter Mead is mentor at Cor Deo and author of several books. This article first appeared on his blog Biblical Preaching.
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