Luke 17:1-10 · Sin, Faith, Duty
In Need of a "Rally Monkey"
Luke 17:5-10
Sermon
by King Duncan
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What do you do when you need a little extra motivation? When your strength or your spirits are depleted, and you’re facing a big challenge—how do you kick up your energy a notch?

In June of 2000, a couple of video board operators for the Los Angeles Angels baseball team decided that their team needed some extra motivation. They were playing the San Francisco Giants and they were behind. So the guys on the video board threw up a video clip on the stadium’s giant video screen—a video clip from the movie “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective.” It featured a few seconds of Ace's monkey, jumping up and down and screeching and acting, well . . . like a monkey. Superimposed over the clip were the words, “Rally Monkey.” The fans went wild for the rally monkey. They cheered and shouted and acted like monkeys themselves and got their energy back up.

And guess what? The Los Angeles Angels came from behind to win the game. And ever since then, the Angels have been famous for their Rally Monkey, their unofficial mascot, who gets the fans excited and cheering for the team. (1)

In our Bible passage today, Jesus’ disciples are feeling overwhelmed, so overwhelmed that they made a request of him. No, it wasn’t that he provide them with a rally monkey. It was more mundane than that—though far more potent. “Increase our faith!” they said.

Interesting request. “Increase our faith!” What do you think motivated this request? Was the home team losing? Did the disciples need a Rally Monkey to motivate them to come from behind? What could have caused his apostles to make this unusual request that Jesus increase their faith? If you read the preceding four verses before today’s lesson, you get a clue to what Jesus was asking of his disciples that so overwhelmed them. I’ll bet you will be surprised at the answer. He asked two things of them—two things that he also asks of you and me. Are you ready?

The first thing he asked of them was that they not be a stumbling block to others. That seems like a simple request, don’t you think? In other words, don’t cause other people to sin. That sounds like something easy to accomplish, and yet this was obviously an important matter to Jesus. Listen closely to what he says to his disciples:

“Things that cause people to stumble are bound to come, but woe to anyone through whom they come. It would be better for them to be thrown into the sea with a millstone tied around their neck than to cause one of these little ones to stumble. So watch yourselves.”

What a powerful and important teaching: “Things that cause people to stumble are bound to come, but woe to anyone through whom they come. It would be better for them to be thrown into the sea with a millstone tied around their neck than to cause one of these little ones to stumble. So watch yourselves.”

Have any Christian leaders ever been guilty of causing other people to stumble? Sadly, as we all know, it has happened, and it somehow always makes the headlines. It’s tragic. Do the names Jimmy Swaggart and Jim Bakker come to mind to some of us? Could any of us cause someone else to stumble? Yes, I’m afraid so. I hope not, but it’s possible. Jesus says it is a serious matter if we stumble, but it’s much more serious if we cause someone else to stumble. So, as Christ says, we need to watch ourselves. We are not only responsible for our own behavior, we are also responsible for the example that we set for others.

Do you understand how much character and how much humility that requires?

We mentioned the Los Angeles Angels. The first baseman for the Angels is a man named Albert Pujols. For those of you who do not follow major league baseball, Pujols is a World Series champ, an eight-time All Star, and the recipient of three National League Most Valuable Player awards.

But people who know him best say that even more impressive than his feats on the field is his life off the field. For one thing, the Pujols Family Foundation he started offers support and care to people with Down syndrome and their families. The foundation also helps the poor in Pujols’ native Dominican Republic. But Albert Pujols seeks in other ways to practice what he preaches.

While speaking at an event at Lafayette Senior High School in Missouri, Pujols read Philippians 2:3 to the crowd: “Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves.” He said, “One way for me to stay satisfied in Jesus is for me to stay humble. Humility is getting on your knees and staying in God’s will—what he wants for me, not what the world wants. It would be easy to go out and do whatever I want, but those things only satisfy the flesh for a moment. Jesus satisfies my soul forever.” (2)

Listen again to that last quote: “It would be easy to go out and do whatever I want, but those things only satisfy the flesh for a moment.” Albert Pujols has the resources to live anyway he wants. He could live by the standard so popular in our society today, “If it feels good, do it.” He could live only to satisfy his own appetites. So why doesn’t he? The answer is in his faith in Christ: “Jesus satisfies my soul forever.”

Do not be a stumbling block to others, Jesus says to his disciples. Then there is a second thing he says to his disciples—forgive those who sin against you.

These words are just as important to Christ as those about not causing someone else to stumble: “If your brother or sister sins against you, rebuke them; and if they repent, forgive them. Even if they sin against you seven times in a day and seven times come back to you saying ‘I repent,’ you must forgive them.”

Again, we need to see how importance forgiveness was to Jesus. Think about it. He died so that we could be forgiven. Forgiveness is at the very center of the Gospel—and yet there are many followers of Christ who seem to be capable of nearly every other Christian virtue but being able to forgive people who have hurt or offended them.

Author Jim Wilson tells about an episode that occurred in season three of a popular television program called “Monk.” Some of you may remember Monk. It was carried for many years on the USA Network and is still available on one of the streaming services.

Adrian Monk, the title character, is a somewhat defective detective. He suffers from Obsessive Compulsive Disorder which is responsible for most of the comedy in the series. He has suffered from his eccentricities at least ever since the death of his beloved wife Trudy.

In this episode Monk travels to New York to search for Trudy’s killer. At the end of the episode, he meets the man, who for a couple thousand dollars placed a bomb under Trudy’s car. The man is near death, lying in a hospital bed, hooked up to a morphine drip. As Monk finishes his questioning, the man asks, “Forgive me.”

With a solemn expression on his face Monk walks over to the morphine drip, turns it off and says, “This is me turning off your morphine,” which, of course, would cause unbearable pain for this man, his wife’s murderer.

Then a few seconds later, he turns back and says, “This is Trudy turning it back on,” which is exactly what he does. Mr. Monk couldn’t forgive this man in his own strength. Only drawing on the memory of Trudy’s love could he do the right thing. (3)

There may be someone in your life that—under your own power—you could never forgive. Could you draw on Jesus’ strength—and more importantly on Jesus’ love—and let him forgive that person through you?

Jesus told his disciples not to cause another person to sin. Then he taught them about forgiving others, no matter how many times others sinned against them. And it was in response to these two simple teachings that the apostles made this earnest plea, “Increase our faith!”  

It’s as if the disciples looked at each other, shook their heads and said, “It’s not possible, Lord. We don’t have it in us to love people like that.”

It’s interesting to note that when Jesus sent his followers out to preach and teach and do miracles in his name, they went out boldly and successfully completed that challenge. It was in the little acts of love, forgiveness, self-sacrifice, they tended to fall on their faces. The disciples sound sort of like us.

Years ago, a young man was arrested and convicted of burglary in New York City. How did the police catch him? As he began his burglary of a high-rise apartment, he noticed a statue of Jesus on the mantelpiece. He could not stand this figure of Jesus watching him as he went about his business, so he carefully turned it around. In the process he left fingerprints on the statue. (4) That’s how the police caught him.

I think the apostles couldn’t stand Jesus looking at them at this point. They knew they were going to fail him. They knew they couldn’t live the kind of grace-filled life he was prescribing under their own power. “You want us to be like you,” they were saying, “forgiving those who sin against us and setting an example of flawless love and holiness? We can’t do it! It’s beyond our power!” And so they asked for an extra dose of faith.

But were they asking for real faith, or were they simply asking for more warm-and-fuzzy feelings about being one of his followers? So much ministry, so many good works, so many blessings never get done because God’s people are waiting around to feel like doing ministry.

Jesus was teaching them that faith doesn’t wait on feelings. So you don’t feel like being a godly example to others? You don’t feel like forgiving others when they do you wrong? Join the crowd. You’re human. But your feelings aren’t evidence of your faith. Your actions are. Your obedience is. Faith is obeying God’s calling whether you feel like it or not, and doing it through His strength and not your own. 

You see, more faith was not their real need. Look at what Jesus says in response to their demand for more faith: “If you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mulberry tree, ‘Be uprooted and planted in the sea,’ and it will obey you.” Jesus was saying to his disciples that they didn’t need a rally monkey. They didn’t even need more faith. What they needed was to put the faith they had to work.

Only a tiny bit of faith in God is enough to accomplish seemingly impossible things. What they really needed was obedience to Christ’s plan for their lives

When John Beekman was in his early twenties, he was diagnosed with a serious heart problem. His doctor told him that he probably wouldn’t live past forty. John’s burning passion was to serve the Lord as a missionary, so he asked his doctor if his heart problems would disqualify him from missionary work. The doctor said, “John, if the Lord wants you on the mission field, He’ll get you there. And if I were you I would much rather spend ten years of dedicated life on the mission field where there are many who have not yet heard the gospel message, than choose to stay here in the States and perhaps live a longer life minis­tering among people who have heard it many times already.”

With this confirmation, John Beekman and his wife, Elaine, headed to Chiapas in southern Mexico to minister to the Chol Indians. The Beekmans walked through the villages every day, learning the Chol language and beliefs. They climbed up steep hills to reach the most remote villages. John’s heart condition caused him pain and fatigue, but he was determined to reach as many Chol people as possible with the message of Jesus. It took John seven years, from 1948 to 1955, to write a complete translation of the New Testament in the Chol language, but this resulted in even more Chol people giving their lives to Christ.

In 1955, John had to undergo heart surgery to correct a faulty valve. He realized once again that his time was limited, so John founded a Bible college to train the Chol men to be pastors in their community. He also founded a language school, conducted workshops in language translation and the Bible, and published books and papers on the Greek language and translating the Bible. In 1973, he needed a second heart surgery, but he continued working.

In 1977, John Beekman returned briefly to Chiapas to discover that there were now 12,000 Christians in the small villages where he’d once ministered. Friends and colleagues encouraged him to retire from ministry, but John always said, “As long as I’m here, I want to use whatever strength I have to be of some service in God’s work.”

In 1980, at age 61, John Beekman’s heart finally gave out. He had outlived his doctors’ prognosis by at least thirty years, and brought the message of God to thousands of people around the world. (5) 

John Beekman exceeded every expectation other people had for him not because he had a perfect heart within him. He accomplished so much because he had opened his heart to Jesus Christ, and he allowed Christ’s heart to beat in his chest.

When the disciples heard Jesus tell them to live exemplary lives and to forgive those who sinned against them regardless of how often that occurred, the disciples asked for more faith. What they would learn is that what they needed was not more faith. What they needed was for Christ to live in their hearts. What they needed was obedience to Christ’s teachings. Then they would move mountains and God would be forever glorified.


1. “15 years ago, the Angels’ Rally Monkey was born with some help from Ace Ventura” by Chris Landers, June 6, 2015. https://www.mlb.com/cut4/15-years-ago-angels-rally-monkey-was-born/c-128832446.

2. Tim Ellsworth, “Holy Hitter,” World magazine (2-27-10). Cited by Barry L. Davis, 52 Topical Sermons Volume 1 (GodSpeed Publishing), p. 125.  

3. Jim Wilson, Fresh Illustrations, Volume 1 (pp. 21-22). Kindle Edition.

4. Volker Heide, God’s Punch Line (Madison, CT: King of Kings Publishing).

5. George H. Fox, Survivor Number Three (Whittier, CA: Moody Insti­tute of Science), film script, p. 10. Cited by George Sweeting, Secrets of Excellence (Chicago, IL: Moody Press, 1985), pp. 39-49.

Dynamic Preaching, Fourth Quarter Sermons, by King Duncan