Does
it bother you what others think about you? About how you dress? What you say?
How you conduct yourself? Are you scared to do certain things (or not to do
other things) because of what someone will think about it? That is called the fear
of man. That is not a good kind of fear.
The
right kind of fear is a fear of God, of what He thinks, of what He commands, of
what He expects. This sermon from Luke 12:1-12 is about the right kind of
faith.
Key Truth: Luke
wrote Luke 12:1-12 to teach believers that the right kind of fear is
the fear of God, not fear of other people.
Key Application: Today I
want to show you what God’s Word says about the fear of God.
Pray and Read:
Luke 12:1-12
Sermon Points:
1. The
right kind of fear is for God, not men (Luke 12:1-7)
Contextual Notes:
Since the beginning of his Gospel,
Luke has focused on the importance of walking in faith and not in unbelief. Luke’s
Gospel makes a major shift at Luke 9:51 where Jesus leaves his Galilean ministry
and turns resolutely toward Jerusalem and His coming Suffering, Death, and
Resurrection. Luke’s message of trusting Christ sharpens, and his warning
against unbelief hones in on the very religious yet unbelieving Jewish
leadership.
Luke shows us that new resolute
focus in chapters 10 and 11, calling us to realign our own priorities to those
of our resolute Lord. Through Jesus’ sending out the Seventy, we see the
priority of His Gospel (Luke 10:1-24). In the Parable of the Good Samaritan we
see the high priority of our love for others (Luke 10:25-37). In the story of
Mary and Martha, Luke teaches the priority of His Presence (Luke 10:38-42)
walked out in Luke 11:1-13 in a calling to a higher priority of prayer in our
lives. Through Jesus’ teaching on unclean spirits, Luke points us to the
priority of Jesus’ authority in our lives (Luke 11:14-28). Thus, Luke calls us
to a high priority on repentance (Luke 11:29-36).
Last week, Jesus pointed us to the
wrong kind of religion – dead religion that is devoid of relationship with Him
(Luke 11:37-54). Today, Luke points us to the right kind of fear (Luke
12:1-12). The following passages in chapter 12 point us to the wrong kind of
focus (Luke 12:13-21), the wrong kind of fear (Luke 12:22-34), and the right kind
of focus (Luke 12:35-59).Then the beginning of chapter 13 completes Luke’s
outline calling us to the right kind of religion, one of repentance and grace
(Luke 13:1-19). .[1]
Luke
10:1-24 The Priority of His
Gospel
Luke 10:25-37 The Priority of Your Love
Luke
10:38-42 The Priority of His
Presence
Luke 11:1-13 The
Priority of Your Prayer
Luke
11:14-28 The Priority of His
Authority
Luke
11:29-36 The Priority of Your
Repentance
Luke
11:37-54 The Wrong Kind of
Religion
Luke
12:1-12 The Right Kind of
Fear
Luke
12:13-21 The Wrong Kind of
Focus
Luke
12:22-34 The Wrong Kind of Fear
Luke 12:35-59 The Right
Kind of Focus
Luke 13:1-9 The Right Kind of Religion
Sermon Points:
1. The
right kind of fear is for God, not men (Luke 12:1-7)
2. The
right kind of allegiance is to Jesus, not men (Luke 12:8-12)
Exposition: Note
well,
1.
THE RIGHT KIND OF FEAR IS FOR GOD,
NOT MEN (Luke 12:1-7)
a. In chapter 11, Jesus confronted the
religious leaders, saying that dead religion is self-centered and defiling
(Luke 11:37-44), and that it hates the Word and its proclamation (Luke
11:45-54). Despite arousing the entrapping ire of the religious leadership
(Luke 11:53-54), Jesus continues with ever larger crowds (Luke 12:1). He knows
that they will attack any who stand with him. So in the midst of the large
gathering crowd, Jesus warns his disciples about them. He says that the only
way to be free of dead religion and hypocrisy is to have the right kind of fear
– fear of God and not man. They should acknowledge Jesus publicly and not fear
the authorities.
b. Luke
12:1 – The example of hypocrisy:
The word mans play-acting. Here Jesus pinpoints the cause. The play actor is
fearful of what other people think and desperate to look good to them. The yeast of the Pharisees: Yeast was a
symbol in Judaism of the permeating power of sin (1 Cor. 5:6). The background
is the Passover command to the Jews to remove all yeast from their homes and
not eat unleavened bread for seven days (Exod 12:14-20). APPLICATION:
If you really care about what God thinks of you, you won’t be caught in the
trap of pretending to live up to others’ expectations.
c. Luke
12:2-3 – The exposure of hypocrisy:
At the judgment, all hypocrisy will be revealed! Nothing concealed that will
not be disclosed. Jesus is talking about eschatological judgment. Since God
sees and knows all things, every human deed will be judged by Him righteously
(Prov 15:3). APPLICATION: So if you
are living a double life now, be sure it will be revealed one day.
d. Luke
12:4-5 – True fear:
Don’t fear people. They can only kill the body. Do fear God. God is to be
respected and revered and constantly obeyed.
He can destroy both body and soul! Friends: This the only place in the
first three gospels where Jesus calls his disciples friends (John 15:14f). Throw you into gehenna: Gehenna
(meaning the valley of the sons of Hinnom) is a ravine running along the
southwest walls of Jerusalem. The valley became notorious as a place where the
children of Judah were offered as burn sacrifices to the god Baal Molech (Jer.
7:31-32). Later it was used as a place to burn rubbish (Jer 19:2, 10-13). The
fire and stench of the ancient landfill became a vivid metaphor for the place
of the wicked’s punishment. God’s judgment is associated with fire in the OT
(Deut 32:22).
e. Luke
12:6-7 – God’s Care.
The Judge to be feared is also a Father to be trusted. You can trust God
because He cares even for sparrows, the least of His creatures. The sparrow was
one of the least expensive things sold in the market (Matt 10:29)[2]
and may have been eaten by the extremely poor. If God remembers these
“worthless birds,” how much more will He care for you the greatest of His
creatures? The very hairs of your head are all numbered (1 Sam 14:45; 2 Sam
14:11; 1 Kings 1:52).
f.
APPLICATION: Brothers and sisters, there is a
Judge, but the Judge is one of mercy and grace. He has a standard, and He will
hold to his standard, but He measures with mercy and grace. If God knows such
insignificant details, how much more does he care for the important things in
your life. It is time to do away with hypocrisy and be obedient to your Lord in
your work, in your classes, with your family.
2.
THE RIGHT KIND OF ALLEGIANCE IS TO
JESUS, NOT MEN (Luke 12:8-12)
a.
Luke 12:8-9 – Acknowledge him before
the angels: The
image Jesus gives is of the Throne Room of God on Judgment Day (Dan 7:7-14)
with angelic attendants (Isaiah 6:1-4; Rev 4:6-11). Jesus is both intercessor
(priest/advocate/defense attorney) and prosecutor before the heavenly courts.
If we confess him now, He will confess us before His Father, and the converse
is also true.
APPLICATION: Loyalty to God can never remain for you an abstract idea. Acknowledge the Son and be acknowledged by Him before the Father. This is why we give an invitation and ask you to walk to the altar. Putting your body into motion to give concrete action to the commitment in your heart is so important. I will give you an invitation at the end of this service, and if the Lord is dealing with your heart, you need to respond.
APPLICATION: Loyalty to God can never remain for you an abstract idea. Acknowledge the Son and be acknowledged by Him before the Father. This is why we give an invitation and ask you to walk to the altar. Putting your body into motion to give concrete action to the commitment in your heart is so important. I will give you an invitation at the end of this service, and if the Lord is dealing with your heart, you need to respond.
b.
Luke 12:10 – Blasphemy against the
Spirit: Before we
go any further we must deal with this issue. This verse has been the subject of
much confusion as the “unpardonable sin.” Why is it that speaking against Jesus
is forgivable but blaspheming the Holy Spirit is not? Nonbelievers may say
something against the Son of Man without incurring God’s wrath because they are
unaware of what they are doing (Acts 3:17; Luke 23:34), since the Holy Spirit
has not revealed to them the significance of Jesus and their sin to them. Yes,
God’s love and kindness have been revealed to every person (Titus 2:11; Rom
1:19-20), and the Bible gives witness to God’s way of making people right with
him (Rom 3:21-22; Luke 24:27, 44-47).
APPLICATION: Luke emphasizes the person and work of the Holy Spirit, and if a person through unbelief willfully rejects the Holy Spirit’s leading toward salvation in Jesus, then he blasphemes the Holy Spirit. Only when a person understands the Gospel in his heart yet still rejects it is he blaspheming the Holy Spirit and risking eternal punishment (Heb 6:4-6).
APPLICATION: Luke emphasizes the person and work of the Holy Spirit, and if a person through unbelief willfully rejects the Holy Spirit’s leading toward salvation in Jesus, then he blasphemes the Holy Spirit. Only when a person understands the Gospel in his heart yet still rejects it is he blaspheming the Holy Spirit and risking eternal punishment (Heb 6:4-6).
c.
Jesus’
comment here appears to be the final rejection of the Spirit’s revelation
through Jesus, resulting in the certainty of judgment. The Holy Spirit provides
the authenticating evidence of the truth. It is turning to the darkness in the
face of the greatest light. Matthew and Mark place Jesus’ comment in the
Beelzebub controversy (Matt 12:31f; Mark 3:28f). The OT does not mention
blasphemy of the Spirit, but it does mention Israel’s rebellion against and
grieving the Spirit of God in the desert (Psalm 106:32-33; Isaiah 63:10). Luke
is showing that disowning the Lord Jesus does not mean one is merely speaking
against Him but actually fighting against the Holy Spirit while He is holding
the truth about Jesus in front of you.
d.
APPLICATION: No one hearing or reading Luke’s
Gospel can reasonably excuse himself by saying, “The Holy Spirit has not
enlightened me,” for He may be doing that right now. It is your responsibility
to be open to the working of God’s Spirit and to check the Scriptures to see if
these things are true (Acts 17:11). So is there an unpardonable sin? Yes there
is. What is it? It
is rejecting the leadership of the Holy Spirit to submit oneself to Jesus
Christ as Lord. It is rejection of the Holy Spirit’s conviction of sin,
righteousness, and judgment. The unpardonable sin is rejecting Jesus as Lord
(John 3:16).
e.
Luke 12:10-12 – Jesus promises that in persecution
they will be sustained and empowered by the Holy Spirit Himself (Matt 10:19-20;
Mark 13:11; Luke 21:14-15). Luke will show in Acts many instances of this
promise fulfilled. Synagogues, rulers,
and authorities: Early Jewish Christians stood trial and were sentenced in
the synagogue as a form of discipline (cf. Acts 4:1-22; 5:17-42; 6:12-15). The
rulers and authorities probably refers to Roman and local authorities (Luke
21:12). APPLICATION: Depend on the
Spirit and be defended by Him before people.
Invitation:
Sources:
F.F.
Bruce, gen. ed. The International Bible
Commentary (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1986), 1208.
Alfred
Edersheim, The Life and Times of Jesus
the Messiah (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1993), 623-4.
Craig
Keener, The IVP Bible Background
Commentary: New Testament (Downers Grove: Intervarsity, 1993), 222-3.
Dwight
J. Pentecost, The Words and Works of
Jesus Christ (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1981), 312-3.
Lawrence
O. Richards, The Bible Reader’s Companion
(Wheaton: Victor, 1991), 663.
David
H. Stern, Jewish New Testament Commentary
(Clarksville, MD: Jewish New Testament Publications, 1996), .
Strauss,
Mark. “Luke.” Vol. 1. Clinton E. Arnold, gen. ed. Zondervan Illustratied Bible Backgrounds Commentary (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan, 2002), 1:426-7.
Wilmington,
Harold L. The Outline Bible
(Nashville: Tyndale House, 199), 538-9.
[1] Luke 11:14-17:11 is called the
Perean Discourses, during a time of ministry in Perea just east of the Jordan
from about Sept A.D. 28 to April A.D. 29 when he returned to Jerusalem for his final
week of ministry. Perhaps because it was winter, Luke records more teaching
than activities of Jesus. Luke is the only record of these days and teachings
with the exception of Matt 12:22-45 and John 10:22-42; 11:1-54. Like the
beginning of Jesus’ ministry in Galilee (Luke 6:20-49), this period of ministry
nearer Jerusalem was marked with much teaching and many parables. In the Perean
Discourses, Jesus resumes, repeats, and reinforces with more fullness some of
his Galilean teaching.
[2] The assarion was a Roman copper
coin worth 1/16 of a denarius (Luke 7:41).
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