Luke 17:1-10 · Sin, Faith, Duty
No Snap Courses
Luke 17:1-10
Sermon
by Carveth Mitchell
Loading...

More than a century ago Sydney Smith wrote in his Lady Holland’s Memoir these disturbing words: "Whoever wishes to imply the absence of everything agreeable and inviting, he calls it a sermon." How shall we escape that indictment today?

When we read verses seven through ten in today’s Gospel, it is somewhat shocking to read that Jesus said this in describing our relationship with God. We must remember, however, that like most parables, this is only a partial view of God. There is no mention here, for example, of God’s love and forgiveness.

These words of Jesus show a knowledgeable and realistic picture of rural Palestinian life in his day. Here he is neither commending nor condemning the master’s treatment of his servants. He is merely describing what was to them a well-known situation. Jesus always had a reason for his teaching, and these forceful words are no exception. Let’s look at his obvious purpose in telling this parable to the disciples of both his day and of ours.

I

It is a warning that following Jesus simply in the expectation of cheap blessings and comfort is to miss much of the responsibility and obligation of discipleship. It is evident in many places in the Gospels that Jesus was well aware that some of those who followed him were doing so out of ignorance of what was expected of them. They were unaware of the nature and the cost of discipleship. There was a discussion even among the twelve as to who should be greatest among them. (Luke 9:46) James and John were interested that they should sit one at his right hand and one at his left when he came into his glory. (Mark 10:35-45)

When Jesus said, "The foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests; but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head" (Luke 9:58), one would-be follower backed off, saying, "Suffer me first to bury my father." He meant that he couldn’t keep on with Jesus as long as his father was alive. One excuse is as good as another. When the one we have called the "rich young ruler" heard the cost of following Jesus, he "turned away sorrowing." (Matthew 19:22)

It is inevitable that this misunderstanding of the cost of discipleship should he present in our day as well. A missionary was telling his audience about the wondrous love and forgiveness of God. He used the story of the prodigal son. One young tribesman came up to him afterward and said, "Master, I am the prodigal son." The missionary was pleased at this response - glad that the seed of the Word had taken root. However, the young man waited expectantly, and after a few moments asked, "Master, where is my fatted calf?" He needed to hear, as many of us do, the cost - the duty, the obligation of being a disciple of Jesus. The blessings follow that.

In our discussions of the Christian life we tend to emphasize its joy, its peace of mind, its awareness of forgiveness. This is a stern warning that following Jesus is not simply being a kindly personality and joining a happiness cult. There is a joy, a sense of forgiveness, a peace of mind that comes from believing in Jesus as our personal Savior. There is a certain winsomeness as we see the Christian life in action - its patience, its kindness, its love, its forgiveness and its generosity.

However, there is another side to it too. There is that which is expected of those who would be his disciples. This is one of the places where Jesus tells us what it is. He uses the hard, unyielding word "duty." The dictionary says that a duty is "something we ought to do." It is not a choice, but an obligation. In these verses Jesus tells us that it is a rigorous duty indeed. There is no room for pride in what we do for God. As Christians, our main concern is obedience, and the word "obedience," like the word "duty," does not fall pleasantly on our ears. We live in a democracy where those two words are seldom used. All the more, then, do we need to hear these words from Jesus. We need to think less about our blessings from God and more about our duty as Christians toward God.

II

These verses remind us that the nature of God is complex, even as we who are made in his image are complex. Like a beautiful diamond, the nature of God has many facets. Jesus here reveals an aspect of God’s nature which we may not like, but which we need to see. Jesus has shown that God, as revealed in him, is a loving father, an understanding, forgiving Lord, a suffering servant whose followers shall not walk in darkness, but who have the light of life. (John 8:12)

Here he declares that God is not only loving, he is expectant. He is not only patient, he is demanding. One who sets his hand to the plow and hesitantly looks back is not worthy of the Kingdom of God. (Luke 9:62) God is easy to please, but hard to satisfy. Serving our Lord is a relentless and unending task. In our choosing of, and our discussion about, Christian discipleship, we must not neglect to include this facet of the nature of God.

III

This parable keeps us from being proud of our virtues or smug in our goodness. We are only doing what is expected of us. These verses keep us from self-pity in our sorrows, our setbacks and our hardships. The words, "I’ve always been a good person. Why does this happen to me?" should never be on our lips.

We are only doing what is expected of us. The rest is in God’s hands. Look back over your school days, when you were a learner. From whom did you learn the most? Whose teachings lingered the longest? Whose demands best prepared you for life? The easy teachers or the hard taskmasters?

A high school teacher who confides in me is reported to be what the students call a "tough teacher." There are no easy grades. The assignments are completed - or else! She is constant in encouragement, plentiful in patience, generous in help, but demanding in performance. She tells me that her students often groan and sigh - but they work and they learn. When those students go on to college, to whom do they telephone (long distance yet, and at their own expense!) to exult that they are far ahead of their fellow students in those particular courses? Whom do they come back to visit, to say "thank you" for making them become what they are in their college courses? To the "tough teacher," of course. It was not the easy, but the demanding, teacher who made something out of them, students fit for a college degree.

Does today’s Gospel sound as though God is a hard taskmaster? The word "disciple" comes from the Latin word meaning "learner." To be a disciple means to be not only a "follower" but a "learner." We are learners of the lessons of life and eternity, lessons that prepare us for God’s heart and home.

So we are back to Sydney Smith’s indictment, that with which we began: "Whoever wishes to imply the absence of everything agreeable and inviting, he calls it a sermon." Can we be charged with that today? Yet it is not I, but our Lord himself, who laid the basis for our discussion. Evidently Jesus believed his followers ought to hear it. We would much rather read about and hear about God’s love and forgiveness and blessings than we would about his demands. As those who name the name of Jesus and set our footsteps on the road to heaven, we need to remember that God does his labor of love and life, not through snap courses, but through demanding assignments. From the word "disciple" we get our word "discipline." The Gospel for today reveals God’s discipline.

The Christian hope is that God, through Jesus, can make something out of us that’s fit to be with him. This is the way he does it.

Who answers Christ’s insistent call
Must give himself, his life, his all,
Without the backward look;
Who sets his hand unto the plow
And glances back with anxious brow
His calling hath mistook.
Christ claims him wholly for His own;
He must be Christ’s and Christ’s alone.
John Oxenham (quoted in the Expositor’s Minister’s Annual 1930)

"So you also, when you have done all that is commanded of you, say 'We are unworthy servants; we have only done what was our duty.' "

Teach us who are learners, O Lord, the lessons of life that prepare us for eternity. We who are the disciples of Jesus claim his patience and forgiveness toward us and bask in his love for us. Help us to accept the whole Jesus. Forbid it that we should shrink from his claims on us. By your Holy Spirit strengthen us in the dutiful service he demands. We ask it in his name. Amen

CSS Publishing Company, The Sign In the Subway, by Carveth Mitchell