Luke 17:1-10 · Sin, Faith, Duty
Jesus Says, 'Just Do It'
Luke 17:1-10
Sermon
by Dr. Chane M. Hutton
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The sales manager of a large real estate firm was interviewing an applicant for a sales job. "Why have you chosen this career?" he asked.

"I dream of making a million dollars in real estate, like my father," the young man replied.

"Your father made a million dollars in real estate?" asked the impressed sales manager.

"No," replied the young man. "but he always dreamed of it."

Have you ever noticed that the Bible never mentions the dreams of the apostles? It doesn't even mention the ideas of the apostles. However, it devotes an entire book to the "Acts of the Apostles."

Some of the most impressive commercials on television in recent years have been the Nike shoe commercials with the theme, "Just do It." These commercials have normally featured famous athletes, such as Bo Jackson, to get their message across.

One of the more memorable of these commercials, though, shows persons in wheelchairs and with various other kinds of handicapping conditions. These are not persons we would normally think of as athletes. These are people who could easily "just drop it," but instead, as these commercials show us, they "just do it."

These commercials carry a good message for all of us, not just for people who are physically challenged. However, if Nike thinks they invented the phrase, "Just do it," they might be surprised to find that they are a few thousand years late. In Ezra 10:4 we read, "Be of good courage and do it." (Or, we could translate it, "Just do it.")

This is, in effect, the answer Jesus gave his disciples when they asked him to increase their faith. He said, "Just do it," to paraphrase him in today's language. This is a curious answer to a request for more faith. "Just do it." Did Jesus understand the question? Yes, he understood it. Then why did he answer their plea for faith in this way? I believe there are two significant reasons.

FIRST, HE KNEW WHAT THEIR PROBLEM WASN'T.

The disciples' problem was not a lack of faith. Jesus tells them that the size of their faith is not the issue. It only takes faith the size of a mustard seed to uproot a mulberry tree and plant it in the sea. The mulberry tree is a deeply rooted sycamore. It is not easily transplanted anywhere. Jesus was saying to do great things, miraculous things, only takes a minute amount of faith. A mustard seed is about the smallest seed in the world. No one could miss Jesus' point. The disciples' problem was not the size of their faith. No, this was not it at all. They would have to find another excuse for their lack of effectiveness.

We can sympathize with the disciples in their request for more faith. We always tend to think we need more faith, too. If we just had more faith we would be better Christians, we say to ourselves. We would volunteer to serve in mission projects or be more committed to the everyday ministry of the church. So, we pray as the disciples did, "Give us more faith."

What we may not realize is that we are not praying for faith at all. What we are really praying for is for God to make things easier for us. We are asking God to snap His fingers and make it happen for us.

Some of you may remember a hilarious Bill Cosby routine concerning "Noah's Ark." In this routine two hippos are being herded through the doors of the Ark and God says, "Wait a minute, Noah, both of those are male. We need a female." Noah is furious. He complains that it is difficult to turn a hippopotamus around on a boat, much less take him out, and then go round up another one. God says, "I don't care. Get another hippo." Finally, in desperation Noah shouts, "Why don't you just change one of them!" My memory is that God replies, "Noah, how long can you tread water?"

Like the disciples we want God to magically do something which will require little or no action on our part. It is not more faith we are really asking for. It is for God to do for us what we are not willing to do for ourselves.

The context of this particular incident in Luke's Gospel is most interesting. Jesus had just given His disciples a lesson on forgiveness. The disciples were distraught because they didn't know if they could accomplish what Jesus was teaching. Their request for faith was a way of asking God to fix them so they could be forgiving. I suppose with more faith they believed that they would just magically be what God wanted them to be. But lack of faith was not the problem. There are people with lots of faith who still contribute very little to God's kingdom.

They are like a man Ernest Fitzgerald tells about in his book KEEPING PACE. The man was a wealthy English philanthropist named Jeremy Bentham. In his will, Mr. Bentham bequeathed a fortune to a London hospital on whose Board of Directors he had sat for decades. There was, though, one peculiar stipulation. Mr.

Bentham's will read that in order for the hospital to keep the money, he, Jeremy Bentham had to be present at every board meeting. So, for over 100 years the remains of Jeremy Bentham were brought to the board room every month and placed at the head of the table. And for over 100 years in each secretary's minutes was a line that read: "Mr. Jeremy Bentham, present but not voting." (1)

I cannot help saying that many church people resemble Jeremy Bentham. They are present but not voting. These members of Christ's body have good intentions but they park those intentions at the door as they leave the sanctuary. They have lots of faith but nothing significant ever seems to happen in their lives.

Their problem is not a lack of faith. IT IS A LACK OF ACTION. That is the second reason Jesus answered the disciples' plea in the way he did. He knew what their problem wasn't. It wasn't lack of faith. But he also knew what their problem was. They needed to get started living what they already believed.

It never dawned on the disciples that it might take action to forgive others. You know what I'm talking about ” effort. While the disciples were standing around fretting about their perceived inability to act, Jesus' message to them was, "Hey, just do it."

The central problem in the lives of the disciples was not that they did not have enough faith. The problem was that they did not use the faith they had. It is true for us as well. Actually, we have more faith than we think. If we have ever turned on a light switch, filled our car with gas, mailed a letter, flown in an airplane, or ridden in an elevator, believe me, we have faith. Jesus knew the disciple's problem wasn't lack of faith. He knows that it's not our problem either. It's that dread disease, "paralysis by analysis." By waiting around until we receive more faith, or until God gives us some special feeling or some other unmistakable sign, we remain immobile, dysfunctional Christians.

Two-thirds of the world and 50 percent of all church members will not even roll out of bed on Sunday morning. They don't need more faith, they just need to roll out of bed. It is amazing the creative solutions that people can bring to problems if we can just get them into action.

I read an amusing tale recently about a group of French prisoners of war during World War II. These prisoners were forced to work in a German munitions factory. Upon realizing that the very bombs they were building were being used to destroy their beloved homeland, they made the decision to create a malfunction in the devices that detonate the bombs. The bombs were designed to explode on impact. But with the changes that the prisoners made, the bombs were harmless ” no explosion occurred. Puzzled by so many failed attacks, the French government finally conducted an investigation. Upon opening the bombs, they found slips of paper inside bearing these words:

We are doing the best we can
with what we've got,
where we are,
every chance we get. (2)

That would be a good motto for the church. We can pray until we are blue in the face for God to give us more faith, but God wants us to get into action using the faith we already have. God wants us to just do it ” to "do the best we can with what we've got, where we are, every chance we get."

We must put feet to what faith we have before we can expect our faith to grow. And here is the remarkable truth of this text: If we start doing what we know to do then we will see our faith grow beyond our wildest imagination. Why? That brings us to the final thing we need to see: MIRACLES DO OCCUR WHEN CHRISTIAN PEOPLE GET INTO ACTION. It happens all the time all over this world.

Robert C. Morgan in his book, LIFT HIGH THE CROSS, tells about a woman who has a gift shop on the Via Doloroso in Jerusalem. Her name is Frieda Hannah. Frieda is a Palestinian Christian. She makes beautiful embroidery and cross-stitch work. Her specialties are altar paraments, clergy stoles, and Bible markers. She is a very frail woman. She has been in business at the same spot, the sixth station of the cross, for more than thirty years. Her eyes are beginning to fail her. She must wear thick glasses. If you go by Frieda's shop you will see her smiling and greeting the tourists. She has made friends with thousands.

A teacher tells about being in her shop one day with a group of students. Another large group of pilgrims from America were in the shop, too. All of the members of this second group had their Bibles under their arms and crosses hanging from their necks. They were pushing and shoving, demanding to be waited on. A group of little Palestinian beggars had followed the group into the shop asking for money. These "Christian" tourists were indignant. The teacher said they made comments like, "Get these dirty kids out of here." Or, "Why don't they stay in Jordan where they belong?"

Frieda overheard these remarks. The teacher was embarrassed and apologized for his fellow Americans, even though he did not even know them. Frieda's response was, "Oh, that is all right. I learned a long time ago that many of those who [take] the Bible literally don't take it seriously."

Frieda certainly takes the Bible seriously. During the last thirty years, using the earnings from her little shop, she has given over 1,000 Palestinian youth a higher education in North America or Europe. She has built and supported the operation of three medical clinics in the West Bank. She has built and operates two orphanages. There is no way of determining the good that this Christian woman has done over the years.

Frieda Hannah is a modest person. She is always embarrassed to talk about what she does. When asked on one occasion where she gets the energy and determination, she responded, "God did not place me in this world just to take up space. It is not enough just to go along. God wants me to make a difference where I can." (3)

That's it! That's what Jesus was saying to his disciples. Just do it! Make a difference where you can. You already have all the faith you need to perform miracles. All you have to do is get started. And that is Christ's word to us this day. If we want to increase our faith, we have to increase our action. Our problem is not our lack of faith, it is our lack of commitment, dedication, our unwillingness to put feet to our faith. Jesus knows this, and so when we come asking him for more faith, he answers us bluntly, "Just do it! Get into action." As someone has said, "The devil trembles when he hears God's weakest servant say, Yes, Lord, I'll do it!'


1. Michael B. Brown, BE ALL THAT YOU CAN BE, (Lima, Ohio: CSS Publishing Company, Inc., 1995), pp. 55-56 .

2. Jay Strack, EVERYTHING WORTH KNOWING I LEARNED GROWING UP IN FLORIDA, (Dallas: Word Publishing, 1993).

3. (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1995), pp. 139-140.

by Dr. Chane M. Hutton