Built to Last

Built to Last

“Built to Last”

(Luke 6:46-49)

Series: Certainty in Uncertain Times

Rev. Todd A. Linn, PhD

Henderson’s First Baptist Church, Henderson KY

(10-3-10) (AM)

 

  • Take your Bibles and join me in Luke, chapter 6.

 

We have been studying in recent weeks a sermon preached by our Lord Jesus.  The majority of our Lord’s ministry was that of preaching.  Of course He performed miracles and He healed people of sicknesses, but the majority of His ministry was defined by preaching.  Chapter 6 contains a sermon of our Lord’s referred to often as the “Sermon on the Plain,” a sermon preached on a plain, on a level ground to hundreds of people, many of whom were His followers and it is to those He is addressing His message.

 

One of the benefits of having your Bible with you and open before you is that you can see the passage in its context.  It helps me to look down and to see these verses that we are going to study in their proper context.  We’re going to be reading verses 46-49 and it helps to see that these verses are the concluding statements to a message Jesus begins preaching back in verse 20 where it says, “Then He lifted up His eyes toward His disciples, and said: ‘Blessed are you poor,’” and so forth.  And so when I read these last verses of the chapter I realize I am reading our Lord’s conclusion to a sermon.  He is drawing to a conclusion everything He has been teaching His followers to do.

 

Jesus has been preaching that true followers of Christ may be blessed though they they may not enjoy the temporary blessings of the world like riches and fame and popularity.  So they may be blessed when men hate them, exclude them, and revile them, for “great is their reward in heaven.”  Jesus teaches His followers to love their enemies, to be merciful, to not be judgmental, to give and to be forgiving.  He teaches us to not pick at the petty faults of others without recognizing our own faults, removing the log in our own eyes.  He teaches that if we are true followers of Christ, then we will demonstrate this by bearing good fruit.  And then He preaches this conclusion to everything He has said, verses 46-49.

 

  • Stand in honor of the reading of the Word.

 

46 ” But why do you call Me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do the things which I say?

47 “Whoever comes to Me, and hears My sayings and does them, I will show you whom he is like:

48 “He is like a man building a house, who dug deep and laid the foundation on the rock. And when the flood arose, the stream beat vehemently against that house, and could not shake it, for it was founded on the rock.

49 “But he who heard and did nothing is like a man who built a house on the earth without a foundation, against which the stream beat vehemently; and immediately it fell. And the ruin of that house was great.”

 

  • Pray.

 

Introduction:

 

Some of you are familiar with the popular leadership book by Jim Collins entitled, Good to Great.  It’s a book that finds that successful companies and organizations are those who don’t just do good things, but aspire to do great things.  That book followed another popular book by Collins entitled, Built to Last, a book that examines the successful habits of visionary companies.  A visionary company is a company that doesn’t just start well, but finishes well.  It is a company “Built to Last.”

 

If Collins is concerned about companies that are “Built to Last,” our Lord Jesus Christ is concerned with Christians that are “Built to Last.”  Jesus is concerned with lives built to last.  One need not be an expert builder to understand our Lord’s analogy in these concluding verses of chapter 6.  He says that the person who hears all of the teaching of His sermon—and by way of extension, all of the teachings of Christ and all of the teaching of God’s Word—a person who hears our Lord’s teaching but does not live it out is like a man who built his house without a foundation.  The rain falls, the streams rise and beat against that house and it collapses because it wasn’t built to last.  On the other hand, the one who hears our Lord’s teaching and lives it out is like a man who builds his house on a good foundation.  It lasts.

 

So if we were to summarize these verses we would say, “Just as building a house without a foundation results in peril and loss, so hearing Jesus’ words and not doing them results in peril and loss.”  (Repeat).

 

Of course we do not “do” the things that Jesus teaches in the hopes that doing them will accomplish our salvation from hell.  That is, we cannot earn our salvation.  We do not get to heaven by being good little boys and girls and doing what Jesus says.  No.  We are saved by believing that Jesus perfectly kept all of God’s commands for us and died on the cross to satisfy God’s wrath directed at us because of our sin.  Jesus took our place on the cross, taking the punishment we deserved and dying as our substitute.  We are saved on the basis of our believing what Christ has done for us.  We believe He lived a perfect life and died on the cross, was buried, and rose the third day that we may be declared “not guilty.”  This is the Gospel.

 

Then, if we believe the Gospel, then we will live out our lives in keeping with what our Lord commands.  We are committed to Christ.  So believers, Christians, keep our Lord’s commands because we are committed to Him.  We do what He says.  So we’re not concerned with doing what He says in order to get into heaven.  We do what He says because we believe He has taken care of our getting into heaven Himself and we do what He says because we love Him, thank Him, and we commit our lives to Him.  We obey because He has saved us.

 

But the scary thing here is that these words are directed at those who claim to be followers of Christ.  Jesus is talking to those who say they are Christians.  It is a warning.  He may be speaking then to a number of us listening right now.  We say we are followers of Christ—but are we really?  Have we deceived ourselves into merely thinking we are followers of Christ?  Are we not on the path that leads to life, but the path that leads to destruction?   Listen to Jesus, verse 46:

 

46 ” But why do you call Me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do the things which I say?

 

Why do you claim to follow me with your lips, but fail to follow me with your lives?  Why play the part of a play actor, a hypocrite, who says one thing and does another?  Applied directly to Jesus’ sermon on the plain, we “say” we are Christians, yet we do not forgive others.  We speak to the Lord, we say, ‘Lord, Lord,’ but we fail to show mercy.  We say, ‘Lord, Lord,’ but we criticize others, we judge others, and we hate others.  We won’t forgive our spouse, our children, our co-worker, our fellow church member.  Jesus says, “Where do you get off with this business of calling me ‘Lord, Lord’ and not doing what I say?

 

Those of us familiar with the Book of James can hardly read this passage without continually hearing James echoing the teaching of our Lord.  James 1:22-25:

 

22 But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.

23 For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man observing his natural face in a mirror;

24 for he observes himself, goes away, and immediately forgets what kind of man he was.

25 But he who looks into the perfect law of liberty and continues in it, and is not a forgetful hearer but a doer of the work, this one will be blessed in what he does.

 

Mere verbal profession in Christ does not save.  Verbal profession is important and essential, but verbal profession alone does not save a person.  You can say that Jesus is Lord.  You can pray a prayer and be baptized and still be lost.  When we baptize people like you saw in the video or like we will do this evening, we don’t baptize them because we have this absolute assurance that they are saved.  No one really knows that at the moment of baptism.  We baptize based on a person’s profession of faith.  They confess that Jesus is Lord, but no one really knows if they mean business until that life is lived out.  If a person sincerely believes Jesus is Lord then he or she will keep Jesus’ commands.  He or she will live a life that “bears fruit in keeping with repentance (Luke 3:8).”

 

So Jesus is speaking here to those who say they are Christians and He wants us to consider whether we really are.  When Jesus says here that the man who hears His word and does nothing is like the man who builds His house without a foundation, and that the storm comes and the house falls, He is talking about the judgment.  He is talking about judgment day.  When He says these last words here in verse 49, “and the ruin of that house was great,” He’s talking about a life that did not stand in the judgment.  That is especially clear in Matthew’s Gospel where Jesus makes the same point.  He says in Matthew 7:21 and following:

 

21 “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven.

22 Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’

23 And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!’

 

So Jesus is speaking here to those who say they are Christians and He wants us to consider whether we really are.  If we really are followers of Christ, we will do what He says.  So let me give you these three main points we need to consider in our remaining moments.  First:

 

I.  Build on the right Foundation

 

Jesus says that the man who hears His sayings and does them is like a man who builds his house on the right foundation.  He dug deep and laid the foundation on the rock.  So we must build our lives upon the rock of our Lord’s commands.

 

Now again, don’t hear this in the abstract.  Don’t hear it is some nice analogy that someone else needs to get.  Ask yourself, “Do I love the Lord’s commands?  Do I enjoy hearing His Word and living it out?  Is it my inclination to do what Jesus says in His Word or, do I find myself justifying my actions and explaining away my failure to forgive my spouse, or to show mercy to my co-workers, or to love my enemies?  Do I really love those who hate me (at school)?  Does my life give evidence to the fact that I have built my life on the right foundation?”

 

Build on the right foundation of doing what Jesus says.  Build your life on the Word.  Secondly:

 

II.  Building on the right Foundation is not always Easy

 

If you had observed these two houses going up in your neighborhood, you would note that one went up a little more quickly than the other.  The builder of the first house seemed to be taking forever, digging a huge hole in the ground and doing something down there for weeks.  The other guy, however, didn’t seem to waste any time at all, but immediately began to build the first level and off he went.  And you made a note to yourself and said, “You know, if I ever need to build a house, I’m going to contract the second guy to do the work.  He’s quick.  I don’t know what in the world’s going on with that first guy.”

 

Well, what is going on with that first guy is that he is taking pains to build his house carefully on a solid, rock foundation.  It takes time and it is not always easy.  It comes by virtue of blood, sweat, and tears.  Likewise, building your life on the Word of God is not always easy.  It doesn’t “just happen.”  It requires hard work.  For example:

 

A) Listening to the Word is not always easy

 

Right?  It requires hard work to take the time necessary to open God’s Word and to hear from Him.  Listening to the Word requires discipline.  We read from His Word daily to ensure that we are laying the right foundation for our lives.

 

And sometimes what we read and hear in the Word hurts us.  Jesus says in Matthew 6:14-15, for example:

 

14 “For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you.

15 But if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.

 

And that hurts.  Or Jesus calls us out on our hypocrisy and that hurts.  Amy Carmichael, famous missionary to India who served there for 55 years without furlough said, “If you have never been hurt by a word from God, it is probable that you have never heard God speak.”

 

Listening to the Word in a service like this is not always easy.  It requires hard work and discipline.  Kent Hughes, pastor emeritus at College Church in Wheaton, Illinois notes the challenge of listening to biblical preaching in a worship service.  He asks:

 

What can we do to become and be good hearers of the Word in church?  Pray—for the preacher and for yourself.  Come prepared to listen, understanding that listening is work.  The will to concentrate is fundamental.  We cannot listen to God’s Word the way we watch TV—kicked back with a bag of chips in hand or pleasant daydreams occupying our minds.  Keep your Bible open to the sermon text and turn to the other passages that are cited.  Take notes.  One of the curious by-products of the Great Awakening in America [a time of powerful revival in the 1700s and again in the 1800s] was a sudden interest in shorthand.  It was not unusual to see men and women, quill pens in hand, carrying portable inkwells as they hurried to a preaching service on the village green.  The same thing happened in Scotland under similar circumstances.  Revived hearts lead to scribbling hands.

 

Listening to the Word is not always easy and:

 

B) Doing the Word is not always easy

It is not always easy to forgive those who hurt us.  It is not always easy to love those who persecute us.  It is not always easy to restrain our tongues from criticizing or condemning others, but we ARE to do these things.  They are not optional.  Hearing and doing go together.

 

In fact the best way to really learn anything is by doing.  So we hear that we are to forgive and to show mercy and to love others so what do we do?  This week we put that teaching into practice.  We do it.  We do love, we do mercy, we do forgiveness.  For some of us that will mean that we will make a phone call to someone this week, for others we will write a note or send a card.  Some of us will need to change something we’re doing at work or school.  We will do the Word.  What is it that you need to do this week?

 

Build on the right foundation, and know that building on the right foundation is not always easy.  Number three:

 

III.  Building on the right Foundation ensures your building will Last

 

Again, Jesus is speaking primarily concerning Judgment Day.  If we build our lives on the rock solid foundation of God’s Word, hearing what our Lord teaches and then doing what our Lord teaches, then we will demonstrate that we are truly committed to Him.  The building of our lives will stand in the judgment.  When the rain falls and the streams beat vehemently against our lives, when we stand before the judgment seat of our Lord, we will not be shaken because our lives have been built on the rock.

 

But if we have not built our lives on the Word of God, we will fall in the judgment.  We will hear our Lord say, “I never knew you.  Depart from Me you who practice lawlessness (Matthew 7:23).”

 

And this means also that our lives will stand the test of any storm in this world.  Come what may, financial hardship, job loss, troubled marriage, we will stand and not be shaken by the storms of life.  When the rain falls and the streams rise, a life built on God’s Word will stand.  When the storm comes, a marriage built on God’s Word will stand, a relationship built on God’s Word is a relationship built to last.

 

Concluding Illustration:

 

I’ve shared with you before about a guy I heard about who happened to notice one day as he was looking out his window that somebody was building something near his home.  And he watched each day as construction workers cleared the land and moved dirt and trucks rolled in and out.  And the guy said that the first thing he saw them do was to pour a big concrete slab and then put this big steel looking box on top of the slab.  And so there was just this big box on the slab and the guy figured that this must be some kind of storage shed or something the workers kept their tools in.  But he said that after a day or two that the workers began to build a concrete wall all around that big box.  And then they added drywall and now the guy’s wondering what in the world they are building over there.

 

So his curiosity gets the best of him and he goes over to them and he says, “I’ve been watching you guys each day and I saw you pour this foundation and put this box in the middle and then build a wall around it and I’m just wondering what in the world you’re building?!”  And the construction worker said, “Oh, we’re building a bank.”  He said, “That box you’re talking about with the wall all around it there is the vault.”

 

The guy explained that when you build a bank you build the central and most important part of the bank first and then you build everything else around it.  Because of the large size of the vault and its heavy weight, they had to start with it because they later wouldn’t be able to fit it through the door.  And because of the importance of that vault, that it would contain all manner of riches, and treasures, and wealth, it was the key part of that building and so they wanted to be sure they got it right and then built everything else around the centrality of that vault.

 

And when you build a church, when you build a family, when you build a relationship, and when you build a life, you make sure that the most important part is in place—the Bible.  And then you build everything else around it.  Because the Bible contains all the riches and treasures and wealth of the Gospel it is the key part of our lives and everything else must be built around the centrality of the Bible.  When we do this our lives are “Built to Last.”

 

  • Stand for prayer.

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