Luke 6:46-49 · The Wise and Foolish Builders
Building a Victorious Life
Luke 6:39-49
Sermon
by Gary L. Carver
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J. Wallace Hamilton in his book, What About Tomorrow? tells the story of a wealthy builder who called his top assistant and said, "I am going away for ten months. While I am gone, I want you to oversee the building of my home. I am going to be retiring in a few years. I have these wonderful plans and an excellent lot by the lake and I want you to oversee the building of our home." As he left, the assistant said to himself, "He lives in luxury and has done very little for me. When he retires, what will I have?" So the assistant used every opportunity to feather his own nest. He hired an immoral builder, he used inferior products, he hired inferior workmen; and when the house was completed, it looked fine on the outside but its deficiencies in workmanship and materials would soon show as the tests of time came.

When the wealthy builder came back, he said, "Do you like the house?" The assistant replied, "Yes, I do." The builder asked, "Is it beautiful?" The assistant answered, "It certainly is." Then the builder said, "It is a surprise for you. I am retiring in a couple of years and I want you to be taken care of, as well. The house is yours."

We each live in the houses we are building. I was the pastor of a family who asked me to go talk to their son. He was a 21-year-old man, living at home, had no job, nor could he handle one if he did. His mind was literally fried from taking LSD. He could not carry on a coherent conversation. In fact, he told me that his older sister had a machine that she could turn on and drive intense pain through his head.

We live in the houses we build. A girl's parents told her to, "Leave that boy alone" — he was bad news. "But we are in love!" she said. He was older and more experienced. He took advantage of her inexperience, and later on, she became experienced and in trouble. He said he would take care of it, and he did. Now, she will never have her own child.

We live in the houses we build. For forty years, a man smoked three packs of cigarettes a day. Now, he cannot leave his house because of the emphysema and the asthma. He is a prisoner of his breathing apparatus and a prisoner of his own habit. Normally, he would be expected to live another fifteen to twenty years, but the odds are now that he won't make it through the next one. We live in the houses we build.

You know the old saying: "If I had known I was going to live this long, I would have taken better care of myself." All of us, to some extent, can share that sentiment, because it is true — we live in the houses we build. The frightening thing is not that we are going to die — that is a foregone conclusion. We all accept that. The most frightening thing is, we may live; and we may have to live for a long time in the houses we have built for ourselves.

That is part of what Jesus is saying. Jesus is also saying that the durability of our houses will depend upon their foundations. The Tower of Pisa was begun in 1173. Its original constructor worked twelve and one-half years, completed three and one-half stories and then it began to lean — so much so, that he deserted the project, and eighty years later another builder came. He thought he could correct the defect and he built the tiers even straighter, he thought; but that did not solve the problem. Ninety years later, another builder put the dome on its top, but still, every single year, that tower leans a fraction of an inch more. One day, even though it has stood for 800 years, that 14,500-ton tower is going to fall because the soft, watery sub-soil will not support its weight. It is simply on a faulty foundation. Many of us are living our lives on faulty foundations. Our society is seeking to build many lives on faulty foundations. One of those faulty foundations, I believe, is the foundation of self-sufficiency. This is the day of rugged individualism. This is the day when we are "to be our own person." This is the day when we are to strike out and claim our own, develop our own potential, and seek to live in our own strength. None of us was ever meant to live in our own strength. It is simply an impossibility, and no matter how developed, intellectual, educated, or prosperous we may be — or how "macho" we think we are — none of us is self-sufficient.

Another faulty foundation is an effort to obtain the quick fix. The quick fix! We are supposed to have a pill or remedy, a solution for everything; and it is supposed to come quickly. I think that is part of the reason in our world that many people are running toward an easy religion, a religion that requires little, that allows one to sit home and "view the tube" and send in a dollar. Ours is a society that is looking toward "answer-man preachers" with simple answers to complex problems, when all we do is "do as they say." Every time they holler, we send a dollar! And everything will be fine. It is a society that runs after the quick fix of a cheap Christianity, ignoring the fact of what it cost Christ; ignoring the fact that it must cost us if it is to be authentic, life-changing, and have meaning both in our lives and in others. Life and faith cannot be built upon self-sufficiency or an effort to find the quick fix.

It was G. K. Chesterton who said, "There is nothing so weak for lasting results as this enormous importance attached to immediate victory ... There is nothing that fails like success." Immediate victory is so seldom found in life, and its search can develop a faulty and insecure foundation.

But there are true foundations. There are foundations upon which we can build our lives, and they will work. One of those foundations is what Jesus is talking about in our scripture lesson today. He is simply saying that, "He that heareth these words," — he that hears the Sermon on the Mount — embodies their principles, lives out their characteristics, and doeth them, is like a man who built his house upon a rock! When the storms of life assailed it, it stood and stood secure.

I go to the doctor every now and then when something is wrong, and that doctor will share, out of his or her wisdom, information with me about the ailment; and I will hear that. Then he or she will take a piece of paper and, in writing I cannot understand, will write out a prescription. Now I have heard the word of the doctor. I looked in my desk drawer before I came into this service, and I have six prescriptions that have never been filled! It is amazing to me that those doctors' prescriptions have never done me any good at all! I knew what the problem was, and the medicine is prescribed accurately for the ailment; but somehow that medicine has never done me any good. I heard the word. The only thing worse than that, would be to go out and take every medicine available. "I have something wrong, so I will take this medicine, that medicine, and the other medicine. I will consult all my friends and they will tell me what is wrong with me; and they will share with me from their prescriptions."

We need to both hear the Word and do the Word. That is what Jesus is talking about. To hear the Word and to have only the Word is stale, dull, dry, barrenness. To do something without hearing the Word is fanaticism. Jesus is saying, "I want you to hear my Word and then translate my Word into action. I want you to put my intentions for you into application." "Be ye doers of the Word." That is what God calls us to do: Live lives that both hear God's Word and put God's Word into action, lives that are characterized by discipline and obedience.

It was Horace Greeley, the great newspaper editor, who once received a letter from a woman. The letter went something like this: "Can you give me some advice on saving our church? We are always in financial straits, and we have tried everything. We tried a bazaar, we tried a raffle, we had an oyster supper, we had a donkey party (what that is, I do not know!), we had a strawberry festival, and another festival. How can we save our church?" Greeley's advice was two words: "Try Christianity." "Try Christianity!"

Following our Lord has never been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult and left untried. He calls us to a life of obedience, he calls us to a life of discipline, he calls us to a life of hearing his Word and doing his Word, and putting a "period" where God puts a "period." Then, as we discipline ourselves and as we follow him, as we try Christianity, it will solve many of the financial problems, many of the image problems, many of the internal problems that we have. Try God! Try Christianity! Try following Jesus Christ in discipline and obedience.

It was Ruskin who said, "Every duty we omit obscures some truth we might have known." What did he mean? He is simply saying this: Revelation follows action. When we do what we know to do, then God will give us something else to do and something else to learn. Until we get off point A and do what is required there, God is not going to progress us to point B. Revelation follows action, not vice versa. God will reveal his love, his will, his grace, his guidance, his leadership, and his depth to us when we do what we know to do.

Someone said, "I wish I were a better father." God says, "Do the things that good fathers do, and you will be a better father." "I wish I were a better wife." Do the things that good wives do, and you will be a better wife. "I wish I were a deeper Christian." Then do the things that deep Christians do, and you will be a better Christian. Do and then you will be. It is discipline. The foundation of our lives will determine the durability of the house we build, and that foundation is discipline in the way of and obedience to the Word of Jesus Christ. Because every house will be tested. Every home will have the ravages of nature to strike it. Every house we build will be tested, and what are we going to do then? What are we going to do when we have the temptation of sitting down to the table late at night, behind on our bills, and it is tax-figuring time; and we think, "I could just shave a figure here or there and cheat on my taxes"?

What do you do when you have the misfortune of planning and saving for a trip and just as you are to leave on the trip, the family vehicle breaks down and you are facing a $500 charge? What do you do when you have the sorrow of your last parent who has passed away and you are now the oldest person in your family — you are the matriarch or patriarch of your clan? What do you do when you get caught in a terrible illness and you happen to be in-between hospitalization plans? What happens when you are passed over for a promotion by a younger, better qualified person? What do you do when your teenager is in an accident while driving a car, and you have to pay the $500 deductible? What do you do?

What do you do when your mate lies, your friend betrays you, your boss will not support you, or reneges on his support of you? What do you do when you are praying and your prayers will not form? What do you do when the Bible seems to be dull words upon a page, the Spirit is not moving in your life, and you feel that neither God nor anyone else cares. What do you do when you go through the storm or the dark night of the soul? Every house is tested. What do you do, then, if your foundation is built on sand?

Beethoven said when he first learned of his illness and felt its coming effects on his hearing: "I will seize life by the throat!" Many biographers have said he was actually able to turn his deafness into a plus, that his lofty and beautiful music could only come as a compensation for that kind of loss. Here was a man who lived in silence and isolation and it was out of the silence and isolation that he brought beautiful harmony into the world.

What are you going to do when your house is beaten by the storms and the wind and the rain? In 1981, my family and I went to the Southern Baptist Convention in Los Angeles. On the way out, we stopped to see that wonderful wonder of the present world, the Hoover Dam. We learned of its construction. For 23 months, they poured concrete day and night into a base 660 feet thick into the solid granite wall of Black Canyon. This is what is called an arch gravity dam. It is an arch turned on its side and the result is this: The greater the pressure on that dam, the more the dam arches, or wedges, itself into Black Canyon. The greater the pressure, the stronger it becomes.

What about you? Do you have the foundation, the resources, so that you can say, "The greater the pressure, the stronger I become"? Life's troubles and storms bring out the best in some of us and the worst in some of us. Which is it with you? It depends a lot on the foundation on which we are standing. Sometimes we are able, as Beethoven said, "... to grab adversity and seize it by the throat." Sometimes we are able to take the pressures and storms of life and allow it to make us stronger. At other times, our needs are just a little bit more immediate. John Killinger, in his book, Preaching, tells the story of a gunner in a B-17 during World War II. They were coming in for a landing and the gunner was in the nose of the plane. He saw that the airstrip on which they were about to land had a huge ditch in front of it and he knew for them it would be "curtains." He tried to get the attention of the pilot through the intercom system. Finally he did, and this is what he heard: "God, help me not to panic! God, help me not to panic! God, help me not to panic!" The pilot had seen the ditch, too, and the pilot was praying. Then miracle of miracles, that pilot was able to set the plane down right before the ditch, actually bounce over it and then go down the landing strip.

Sometimes, our prayer is simply, "God, help me not to panic." What is your prayer today? Upon which foundation are you building your life?

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany: Building a Victorious Life, by Gary L. Carver