Luke 12:35-48 · Watchfulness
Go Hard or Go Home!
Luke 12:35-48
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Dr. Randy L. Hyde tells about a wealthy family from Massachusetts who used to take a month’s vacation every summer to the coast of Maine, taking their maid with them.  

The maid had an annual ritual at the beach.  She wore an old-fashioned bathing suit, complete with a little white hat, and carried enough paraphernalia to stock Wal-Mart.  She would settle herself on the beach, cover every inch of her exposed flesh and journey down to the water’s edge.  There she would hesitate while taking deep breaths. Slowly she would work up her courage to enter the icy-cold water.

Finally, she would daintily extend one foot and lower it slowly into the water until she barely had her big toe submerged.  Then she repeated the act with the other foot.  Then, having satisfied her minimal urge for a swim, she would retreat to her chair and umbrella and spend the remainder of the vacation curled around a book. (1)

She reminds me of many Christians I have known. They have the stuff of greatness in them, but they never really wade into the waters of Christian discipleship. Maybe a toe. Sometimes an ankle, but rarely do they become so stirred up with the spirit of God that they venture anything great for God.

They are like a car whose transmission is locked in neutral. The sound of the motor is impressive. The lights and the radio work fine. The tread on their tires is brand new. They are shiny and they are attractive. The only problem is that they are not going anywhere. They settle for being only nominal followers of the Master.

Clarence Jordan, the great activist saint of God who inspired the musical, The Cotton Patch Gospel, believed such people violated the Third Commandment, “Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord your God in vain.” He said taking the Lord’s name in vain was not something you do with your lips (by uttering a profanity), “but with your life. You take the name of the Lord in vain when you accept the name of Jesus Christ but don’t do anything with it.”

Such people remind me of something baseball player Luis Gonzales once said. Gonzales played outfield for the Houston Astros. He had a personal motto which he once shared with a group of sports writers. His motto was, “Go hard or go home!” (2)

Time and time again Jesus said basically the same thing to his disciples: “Go hard or go home!”

One of the great unspoken commandments of the Scriptures is that we are to make our lives count for something. We are accountable for our actions. We are called to have dominion over our own destinies.

In the very first chapter of the Bible Adam was to have dominion over his world, and so are we. We are not to be reeds blown by every wind, or rocks unmoving and unmovable. We are to be responsible men and women who recognize that God has entrusted us with the precious gift of freedom. With that freedom God has given us opportunities untold to alter our circumstances, adjust our situations and to improve our lives. We are free to make our life count for something!

Jesus wants his followers to be productive. That’s the first thing we need to see. In today’s lesson he tells a parable about a wise and faithful servant whom his master left in charge of his household. How happy the master will be, Jesus tells us, if he returns and finds the servant living up to his responsibilities. And that is what Christ desires of each of us to live up to our responsibilities to make productive use of our time.

It is the productive person whom Jesus lauded time and time again. Jesus closed this particular parable by adding, “To whom much is given, much is expected.”

That is the basic message of the parable of the talents. Those who put their talents to work were praised and their talents were increased, but the poor fellow who buried his talent in the ground had even the one talent taken from him (Matthew 25:14-30).

In another parable, there is even an unscrupulous servant who found out he was being fired and used his master’s money to buy friends. To his disciples’ surprise, Jesus lauded the man’s ingenuity (Luke 16:1-18). At least he didn’t sit around whining that life had been unfair to him. He took charge of his situation and Jesus praised him.

There is a rather amusing scene in the Book of Exodus. The children of Israel are up against the Red Sea. The army of Pharaoh is hot on their heels. Moses is exhorting the people to trust in God that God will not forsake them. God breaks in on Moses’ exhortation. As the Living Bible paraphrases it, God says to Moses, “Quit praying and get the people moving forward, march!” (Exodus 14:15)

There is a time for praying, but there is also a time for moving forward. There is no virtue in standing still.

“What good is a tree,” asks Jesus, “if it does not bear good fruit?” (Matthew 7:19) “Why do you call me, ‘Lord, Lord,’” he asks in Luke 6:46, “and do not do what I say?” Jesus calls his people to be productive. He wants us to use our brains and use our energies. He wants us to dream dreams and to move mountains.

Bill Borden, son of the famous and wealthy Borden family, went to China as a missionary. There he died of an oriental disease. At his bedside they found a note he had written while he was dying. On it were these words: “No reserve, no retreat, and no regrets.”

I’m sure Jesus loved Bill Borden. “No reserve, no retreat, no regrets.”

Jesus wanted his disciples to be productive. He knew what can be done with those who are ready to take charge those whose lives radiate power.

That is the meaning of faith. Faith is not belief based on an intellectual premise. Faith is action based on an eternal promise.

That is the message of Hebrews 11. The writer begins with Cain and Abel as he shows how by faith the great men of old received the blessings of God. From Abel to Abraham he shows how God is faithful to those who walk according to His purpose.

One of the names included in that list is that of Enoch. Missing is the name of Enoch’s son Methuselah. Methuselah, you will remember, lived 969 years. That’s all we know about him. He lived longer than anyone has ever lived. But as far as we know his life made no other impact than that he lived a long time.

God calls his people to be productive, to be powerful. He calls us to make our lives count. To take charge. Go hard or go home!

Another word people like to use nowadays is “passionate.” What is your passion? Motivation speakers tell us we will be successful if we will follow our passion. And that is true.

I was reading recently about the prolific writer of Western novels, Louis L’Amour. At one time L’Amour was one of the world’s most popular writers.  He wrote 89 novels, over 250 short stories, and sold more than 320 million copies of his work. His writings were translated into over 20 languages.

Such production didn’t come out of a half-hearted effort. L’Amour constantly searched for factual material to fill his novels. Once, he found an abandoned cabin whose occupants seventy years earlier had used newspaper to insulate the structure against frigid winds. He spent days removing this home-made insulation. He took the newspapers home and gleaned enough facts for two stories.

This was not an isolated incident. By the time L’Amour started a novel, he was armed with copies of every topographical map, relief map, and mine chart that existed on the area covered in his story. “My descriptions must be right,” he insists. “When I tell my reader about a well in the desert, he knows it’s there, and that the water is good to drink.”

Once, for $3 a day, he agreed to help an 80‑year‑old trapper who had been hired to skin all the dead cattle on a rancher’s spread. “There were 925 of them, and some had been dead for a while,” L’Amour remembered later. “Nobody else would come near the place,” he said. “But the old man had a story to tell: he had been kidnapped by Apaches when he was seven years old and had been brought up as one of them. He had ridden with the great chiefs Nana and Geronimo.” L’Amour concludes, “I had him all to myself for three months and got a lot of material for books I wrote later: Hondo, Shalako, and The Skyliners.” (3)

That’s passion. Would you be willing to skin 925 cattle, some of them dead for some time, in order to glean a few good facts? That’s why Louis L’Amour was at the top of his profession. What is it that you have a passion for?

Pastor and author Rick Warren says one time he typed the phrase “a passion for . . .” into Amazon.com and found a couple hundred books with that title. “There’s a book call A Passion for Birds, A Passion for Books, A Passion for Cactus, A Passion for Chocolate . . . A Passion for Fashion . . . for Fishing . . . for Flying . . . for Gardening . . . for Needlepoint, Pasta, Ponies. There’s a book called, A Passion for Potatoes . . . There’s even a book called A Passion for Steam. I can’t figure out,” says Warren, “what that one’s all about! I don’t know why you’d get passionate about steam.”

Then Warren adds this observation, “But in our culture it’s ok to be passionate about anything except your religion, except your faith, except your relationship with God. I can go to a rock concert, or a political rally or a baseball game and I can shout my head off. I can get excited. I can get hoarse from yelling so loud. When my team loses I could cry. Nobody thinks that’s a big deal. When my team wins I can jump up and dance around and wave my hands in the air. If I do that at a game people go, ‘He’s a real fan!’ If I do that in church people say, ‘He’s a fanatic! He’s a nut case.’ You don’t want to get too emotional about your faith. It’s ok about anything else but not that.” (4) 

I think we all can relate to that, and it is a crying shame. That is what is missing in many of us. We have no great driving passion for God. It is not that we are bad people. Indeed, we desire to be better than we are. But we would rather not get too excited about it. We are not all that happy with our lives, but then why rock the boat? No passion no power. Productive, powerful, passionate people that is what God seeks.

There is one more descriptive word we should add, however, and that is “prepared.” The Master leaves the servant in charge until he returns. He expects the servant to be prepared to give an accounting of his stewardship.

My friend, if the Master were to return today and were to ask you to give an accounting of your life, would you be prepared? There are some people good people salt of the earth people who will have nothing to show the Master. They were nice enough. They didn’t get into any real trouble. But they made no real contribution to their world, to their community, to their church. They just kind of blended into the landscape for their three score and ten years. The words of the Master, “Unto whom much is given, much is required,” will come as an awful judgment to them.

Pastor Eric Ritz draws our attention to a book titled, Trouble Doesn’t Happen Next Tuesday. It was written by a Salvation Army worker, who started a coffeehouse in a Chicago slum. She poured her whole life into helping troubled youngsters. She wanted them to turn their lives around, through God’s grace in Christ.

In her book, she tells about a young African-American teenaged boy who became a close friend of hers. At first he seemed to be responsive to her ministry, but then he got into trouble. The boy’s name was Terry. He had big hands the hands of an athlete. In fact, several universities were interested in him as a football prospect.

She tells a moving story about how she and Terry met after he had been arrested. She said, “I took Terry’s hands, hands that one day might carry a football for the Chicago Bears, and tried to put my hands around them. Then I asked the Lord to accept those hands, and use them for his glory. Then Terry prayed his own prayer something like this: ‘Help me, not to be using my hands for bad things but good things for people like old folks and little children, people I like to help. Make my hands stronger, so that I can be a big help in the world. Amen, God.’”  That Salvation Army worker was trying to help Terry prepare for a good life a meaningful life and a productive one.

Most of us have had far more advantages than Terry, but how little we have done with those advantages. It is at the end of today’s lesson that Jesus speaks those haunting words, “Unto whom much is given, much is required.” Do you measure up? Are you using your hands to be a big help to the world? Here is what Christ wants out of each of us productive, powerful, passionate, prepared. Such the Father wants to serve Him. Go hard or go home!


1. http://www.lectionary.org/Sermons/Hyde/Acts/Acts%2002.01-21,%20TimeDeliver.htm.

2. Raymond McHenry, Something to Think About (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., 1998).

3. John G. Hubbell in Stephen R. Covey, Everyday Greatness (Nashville: Rutledge Hill Press, 2006), p. 240.

4. http://www.sermoncentral.com/sermons/reigniting-your-passion-for-god-rick-warren-sermon-on-attitude-general-127082.asp.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Third Quarter 2013, by King Duncan