Luke 14:1-14 · Jesus at a Pharisee’s House
God Loves An Underdog
Luke 14:1, 7-14
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Thomas Wheeler, the former Chief Executive Officer of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, told a good story on himself. He said that while he and his wife were out driving he noticed they were low on gas. So he pulled off at the first exit and came to this dumpy little gas station with one pump. There was only one man working the place, so he asked the man to fill it up while he checked the oil. He added a quart of oil, closed the hood, and he saw his wife talking and smiling at the gas station attendant. When they saw him looking at them, the station attendant walked away and pretended as if nothing had happened. Wheeler paid the man and he and his wife pulled out of that seedy little station. As they drove down the road, he asked his wife if she knew the attendant. Well, she admitted she did know him. In fact, she had known him very well. For it seems that they not only had gone to high school together, but they dated seriously for about a year. Well, Wheeler couldn't help bragging a little and said, "Boy were you lucky I came along. Because if you'd married him you'd be the wife of a gas station attendant instead of the wife of a Chief Executive Officer." His wife replied, "My dear, if I had married him, he'd be the Chief Executive Officer and you'd be the gas station attendant."

I know there are many wives out there breathing a hearty, "Amen."

Jesus warned us time and time again not to think more highly of ourselves than we ought to think. The overall impression we get from the Gospels is of a man who disliked "stuffiness." How else do you explain prostitutes going into the Kingdom before Pharisees the best people in the community? How else do you explain, "I was hungry and you gave me nothing to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink...I was naked...sick and in prison...." Does that sound like he identified with the best people in town? What kind of kingdom is it in which the first shall be last and the last first? Let's put it to a vote. How do you feel about it? Sounds kind of radical to me. Almost un-American.

Of course, for those who believe God is an American and middle-class at that-there is another way to look at it. Americans love an underdog and so does God. And that's Good News.

First of all, it is a word of encouragement, because from time to time all of us are underdogs. None of us is at his or her best all the time. There are times when all of us are inadequate to the task at hand.

I was reading about something hilarious that happened when television was "live." STUDIO ONE was one of the most popular shows in the golden days of live television. During one memorable broadcast, the scene was the interior of an airplane cabin. The scene called for the plane to be at an altitude of 30,000 feet, flying over the mountains of Tibet. Three men were in the cabin talking, when suddenly there was silence. One of the actors had forgotten his lines. Being a live production, of course, there were no retakes, no stopping of the action. That was it. Millions of eager viewers were glued to their black-and-white screens, waiting to see what would happen next. What did the actor do? He got to his feet, in an airplane cabin supposedly 30,000 feet over the mountains of Tibet, and voiced this immortal line: "Well, here's where I get off." He left the set and walked into history. (1)

No wonder they videotape all the shows now. It would be interesting to know how the other actors covered his exit. Sometimes we all get ourselves into situations like that situations in which the most we can hope for is a graceful exit.

At the beginning of the Spanish siege of Gibraltar, which lasted from 1779 to 1783, the Queen of Spain sat on a hill facing Gibraltar and, believing that the siege would be a short one, declared that she would not move until she had seen the Spanish flag flying above Gibraltar. As the days passed and there were no signs that the fortress would fall, her vow came to be highly embarrassing. Eventually, the British commander took pity on her and gallantly waved the Spanish flag for a couple of minutes so that the Queen could move without losing face. We've all been there. Even royalty sometimes looks foolish. Indeed no one looks more foolish than a proud person trying to hide a booboo.

Abraham Lincoln's line makes us all feel better: "The (person) who is incapable of making a mistake is incapable of anything."

I'm glad that God loves the underdog. What a relief it is to know that He does not expect perfection. What a word of encouragement.

Even more than that, it is a statement of faith. Do you remember the wonderful story of Gideon back in Judges 68? The armies of the Midianites and the Amalekites and the people of the East were amassed against the people of Israel. The writer tells us that these "armies lay along the valley like locusts for multitude; and their camels were without number, as the sand which is upon the seashore...." It must have been an impressive and terrifying sight to face such an army.

God called a man named Gideon to rally the people of Israel and to lead them against this invading horde. Thirty-two thousand men volunteered for Gideon's army. Gideon must have felt pretty good about that. But God said, that's too many. God's reason: If Israel wins with a big army, the people will say, "This is a victory that we have won." They will not understand that God gave them the victory.

"Tell those who are afraid to go home," God said. Twenty-two thousand men breathed a sigh of relief and headed home. Now there were ten thousand.

"Still too many," said God. "Take them down to the water." (The story is coming back to you, isn't it, from your childhood Sunday School class?) "Let them drink. Those who lap up the water with their tongues like dogs you shall keep. Send the others back home."

Now they were down to 300. God said, "That's more like it." God loves underdogs. God much prefers Davids to Goliaths. Why? Paul tells us in I Corinthians, the first chapter: "So that no one can boast in the presence of God."

(v.29) God is glorified in our weakness! When we are weak, we learn to depend on Him. When we depend on Him, we find out how strong we can be.

In his book, Loving God, Charles Colson gives a powerful example of human weakness and divine power. He tells about a Russian Jewish doctor by the name of Boris Nicholayevich Kornfield, a Russian Jewish doctor who was sentenced to a most inhuman Russian prison for a political crime in the 1950s. Because he was a physician he did receive some privileges in the prison in return for treating other prisoners. Still he suffered much abuse. His treatment would have in fact been unbearable except that he developed a friendship with another prisoner who through the quality of his witness brought Kornfield to a Christian commitment.

Kornfield felt a great inner freedom after this in spite of his oppressive environment. Still, he knew that his days were numbered. He felt a great, almost overwhelming, need to share this inner freedom with someone else.

He had a patient, a cancer patient, who was awaiting surgery. Even though the patient was drifting in and out of consciousness because of anesthesia, Kornfield shared with him what Christ had done in his own life. Kornfield was so enthusiastic about this change in his own life, that he caught the patient's attention in spite of his brief lapses brought on by the medicine. Late into the night, the doctor stayed with his patient, sharing with him the unsearchable riches of Christ. Later that night someone slipped into the doctor's quarters and brutally bludgeoned him to death. From a human standpoint that should be the end of the story-a tragic story ending only in grief. However, it is not.

The patient recovered from his surgery and resumed his life for a while in the prison. However, he was a changed man. Because of Cornfield's testimony, he became a Christian-and what a Christian he became. His name Alexander Solzhenitszyn. Boris Cornfield, in his weakness in a prison, testifying to a cancer patient semiconscious from anesthesia only hours before himself being brutally murdered could not know that he was touching someone who within a couple of decades would become one of the world's most influential voices for Christ. (2) To God be the glory. He is glorified in our weakness. God loves underdogs. What a message of encouragement. What a statement of faith. But one thing more.

What a word of warning. If it is true that God loves the underdog, what does that say to the inhabitants of the wealthiest and most powerful nation in the world?

Someone has noted that the Scripture that people use most in the condemnation of homosexuality is the story of Sodom and Gomorrah. The usual reason given for the destruction of these cities was sexual immorality and that certainly was one reason for it. Yet, when the prophet Ezekiel talked about this destruction, he said: "This was the guilt of your sister Sodom: she and her daughters had pride, surfeit of food, and prosperous ease, but did not aid the poor and needy." (Ezek. 16:49).

We live in a rapidly changing world. Consider the movements occurring behind the Iron Curtain. Who could have predicted them even a year ago? Who could have foreseen that Japan, buried under the rubble of our bombs merely a generation ago, would be perceived as the greatest threat to our national prosperity today? It takes less time than we might think for the world order to reverse itself and the last to become first. Perhaps we need to think harder than we have ever thought before about our relationships with the other peoples of this world particularly our neighbors who have so little.

As individuals, we also need to heed this word of warning. Leo Tolstoy wrote the story of a Russian cobbler named Martin Avdyeeich. Martin lived in a cellar with a single window. From his vantage point he saw mostly boots of those who passed by. Few there were that had not been touched by his hand.

While Martin was still a journeyman his wife died. Their one son grew to be the pride of his life. Then he too died suddenly, leaving Martin despairing and murmuring against God.

One day Martin was visited by an old peasant passing through his city. He said to Martin, "Thy speech, Martin, is not good. How shall we judge the doings of God? It is because thou wouldst have lived for thine own delight that thou dost despair."

"But what is a man to live for" inquired Martin. The old pilgrim answered, "For God, Martin. He gave thee life and for Him thou must live. Then thou wilt grieve about nothing more, and all things will come easy to thee."

The story continues with Martin finding fulfillment in serving God by serving others. (3) Many of us would find life more fulfilling too if we understood that we have been blessed primarily so that we can be a blessing. If we hoard our possessions and despise our less fortunate neighbors, we will discover too late that we have missed the Kingdom.

So be careful the next time you are invited to a banquet that you sit in a position of lesser honor so that your host, Who is God, can call you up to a more honored position. After all, God loves underdogs.


1. Milo O. Frank, HOW TO GET YOUR POINT ACROSS IN 30 SECONDS OR LESS, (New York: Pocket Books, 1986).

2. (Grand Rapids, Mi: Zondervan, 1983), p. 32.

3. Nelson L Price, SERVANTS NOT CELEBRITIES, (Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman Press, 1989).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan