Luke 12:35-48 · Watchfulness
Preparing For The Unexpected
Luke 12:35-48
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Joe Claro tells a great story about the making of one of Cecil B. DeMille's epic films. The film was a biblical extravaganza with a cast of thousands.

Normally, movies are filmed in tiny pieces, but this day's scene was going to be shot live, with all six hundred or so actors and extras going into action at once. DeMille had stationed eleven cameras at various points to pick up the action. They had started work at six in the morning and the complete scene had been rehearsed four times. After each rehearsal, hundreds of actors and dozens of technicians would go back to square one to get ready to begin again.

Now it was late afternoon. The sun was on its way down behind the hills, and there was just time enough to get the shot itself done. DeMille looked over the panorama, saw that all was right, and gave the command to begin again. One hundred extras stormed down a hill. Another hundred stormed up the same hill, ready to do mock battle. In another location, fifty Roman centurions lashed at two hundred slaves who labored to move a huge stone monument. The scene took a good fifteen minutes to complete. When it was over, DeMille yelled, "Cut!" and turned to his assistant director. "I thought it was terrific!" DeMille said smiling.

"It was, C. B.," the assistant said excitedly. "It went off perfectly."

Enormously pleased, the director turned to the head of his camera crew to find out if all the cameras had picked up what they were assigned to film. He waved to the camera supervisor. From the top of the hill, the camera supervisor waved back. Then the camera supervisor called out, "Ready when you are, C.B.!" (1) The cameras had not been turned on. A day's hard work had been in vain.

"Be prepared." That's the scout motto, isn't it? "Be prepared." It's also the motto of the follower of Jesus. Be prepared. It's like the master of a large estate, says Jesus, who goes to a wedding banquet. When he returns home, he expects his servants to be at their posts so that when he knocks on the door, they will open the door immediately for him to come in. If they are prepared for his coming, then the master will reward them bountifully. They will sit at his table and he himself will serve them. If they are not at their post, the master will deal with that, too. Be ready, counseled Jesus. Be prepared. There is probably no wiser advice than that. Be prepared. It is wise advice in terms of our relationship with Christ. It is wise advice in our everyday lives.

PREPARATION IS OFTEN THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SUCCESS AND FAILURE. Jesus wanted us to see that. This simple parable contains one of the great truths of life. People who are prepared have an advantage over those who are not.

We can see a practical example of the importance of preparation in the success of legendary Boston Red Sox baseball star, Ted Williams. In the view of many, Williams was the greatest hitter of all time. And Williams was always prepared. In an article about Williams some years ago, he was reported as saying that in the course of a game he expected to see only one perfect pitch. Only one perfect pitch among the twenty to fifty pitches per game that a batter is likely to see. Williams said that because he had no idea when that one perfect pitch would appear, he knew it was crucial to be both prepared and patient. (2) He waited for that one perfect pitch. When it came, he was prepared.

It is not difficult to see that preparation is one of the keys to a successful life in almost any field. Many of our young people will be quite successful someday in their chosen profession. Why? They worked hard in school and went out prepared. Some of you will get off to a roaring start in your work this week. Why? You've set your priorities, done your homework, know what you must do to make the sale. You~re prepared. Preparation is the difference between the amateur and the pro, the star and the alsoran, the winner and those who trail behind.

Bryant Gumbel, the very polished host of NBC's "Today" show for the past 14 years, is one of those who knows about preparation. Gumbel says he never gets nervous on the air. His secret is to be overly prepared. It isn't the information he's absorbing that matters so much as the act of getting ready and the knowledge that he has put in the time prepping. Ross Perot booked for Friday? Gumbel will have his staff prepare a massive midweek briefing on Perot, and he'll also do his own outside reading. By the time Perot walks on the set, Gumbel believes himself to be the best person alive to conduct that interview.

"If you try using a psychological trick to convince yourself that you're confident, at some level you'll know it's just a trick," Gumbel says. "But the confidence that comes from preparation is the real thing." (3) Preparation is often the difference between success and failure.

PREPARATION IS SOMETIMES THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH. In any situation where there is a substantial risk of failure and the cost of failure is high, preparation takes on a greater urgency. Sometimes it's a case of life and death.

A commander in the elite aerial team the Blue Angels was giving an account of how important preparation is in that risky enterprise.

Flying the lead plane in a show, this commander felt a sudden thump to his plane's tail. Thinking he had been bumped by another plane, he struggled to keep in line, knowing the formation of the other planes was dependent on him. Hours later at the debriefing, he learned of the danger the pilot just behind him had experienced.

What the commander had interpreted as a thump was actually turbulence created by the thrust of a sudden change in the flight pattern of the jet which was following him. It seems the latter's throttle froze in midflight, leaving the pilot to make an instantaneous decision. There was only one choice reallyto fly straight up and out of the pattern to keep from endangering those around him, which is what he did. He was able to rectify and recover the situation because he was prepared to expect the unexpected. The available reaction time was only seconds but he was ready to respond. Seconds between life and death. (4)

How do you prepare for such critical decisions? Study, study, study. Practice, practice, practice. Train, train, train. You do it over and over again until your reflexes respond instinctively. If you have to think before you act, you're in trouble. People who excel in any field know how crucial it is to prepare.

A guitarist who is still thinking, "Now where should I place my fingers on the frets?" is not going to keep up with the band. The surgeon who has to think, "Now where did my textbook say that artery is supposed to be?" is not the person you want operating on you. You want someone who is beyond thinking, who is so proficient at what he or she is doing that right actions come naturally. Preparation is the difference between success and failure. It is sometimes the difference between life and death.

AND PREPARATION IS THE DIFFERENCE IN RECEIVING THE BLESSINGS OF THE MASTER. That's what Jesus is saying to us in our lesson for the day. If the Master finds the servants ready for his coming then he will pour out blessings on them beyond what they can ever imagine. But only if they are prepared. Only if they are to the point in their spiritual lives that they respond instinctively as he would have them respond. And that takes work. It takes practice.

Can you see that the same principles of preparation that apply in our work and in school and in athletics and the arts apply to our living the Christian life? People who are prepared are better equipped to experience the blessings and the benefits that faith has to offer. People who are not prepared are at a disadvantage.

For example, we shouldn't have to do much thinking about right and wrong when we are tempted. If we are prepared, right action will come naturally. When storm clouds rise and our very being is threatened, we will not collapse spiritually if we are prepared. Preparation is the key to spiritual strength and vitality.

Joseph R. Sizoo was once pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C. This was the church Abraham Lincoln often attended while he was president. Sizoo told how moved he was the first time he held Lincoln's Bible. It was the Bible Lincoln heard his mother read when he was only a boy. He learned by memory the many verses his mother read to him from that old Bible. It is said that this was the only possession Lincoln took with him from Pigeon Creek to the Sangamon River and on to Washington when he was elected president.

Sizoo said he wondered where the old Book would fall open when he picked it up. So he tried it. It opened to a page well thumbmarked which gave evidence of having been read many times. Here is the verse to which Lincoln must have referred on many occasions: "Fret not thyself because of evil doers . . . Trust in the Lord and do good . . . Delight thyself also in the Lord . . . ." (Psalm 37:1,3,4). (5)

Those who have studied the life of Lincoln know what made him one of our great presidents. It was the strength of his character. Lincoln prepared himself for this high office by not only knowing the law of the United States but also by knowing the Law of God. He knew both the Word contained in Scripture and the Word that gives counsel in times of prayer. Lincoln was a man of deep faith. He was spiritually prepared. The key to receiving the blessings of the Master is preparation.

Did you know that the average reader can read the Bible through in a year if he or she will read it for only twelve minutes a day? Twelve minutes a day. Could you make a commitment of 12 minutes of your day to better prepare yourself as a man or woman of God? Who knows what word God might speak to you through a few moments spent each day reading this sacred Word and listening prayerfully for God~s counsel for your life. You will benefit and God's Kingdom will benefit if you are prepared when God calls.

Many of you know about the Twelfth Man tradition at Texas A & M University. Texas A & M fans stand during the entire football game. They do it because of an experience in their early football history. In one game things were not going well because of injuries. The A & M coach ran out of substitutes and, in desperation, turned to the spectators and called down a fan who was standing to go into the game. Ever since then, the students have stood throughout the game. By standing throughout the contest fans are saying symbolically, "We're ready. We're prepared to do our part." (6)

Are you ready to do your part? Are you prepared to go down onto the playing field of life to serve the risen Master? Will you be ready to greet him when he knocks on your door. Preparation is often the difference between success and failure. Preparation is sometimes the difference between life and death. Spiritual preparation is most certainly the key to receiving our Master's blessings. Time spent each day reading our Bibles. Time spent each day in prayer. Time spent each day listening for the voice of God. Time spent in worship and in fellowship with other Christians. Are you prepared to receive the Master's many blessings? All of Heaven awaits those who are prepared.


1. THE RANDOM HOUSE BOOK OF JOKES AND ANECDOTES, (New York: Random House, Inc., 1990).

2. Contributed. Source unknown.

3. "How Not to `Choke' Under Pressure." Condensed from MEN'S HEALTH, Bruce Schoenfeld and David Zinczenko. READER'S DIGEST, January 1995, p. 142.

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

5. J. B. Fowler, Jr., ILLUSTRATING GREAT WORDS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, (Nashville, TN: Broadman Press, 1991).

6. William R. Lampkin, MINUTE DEVOTIONS, (Lima, Ohio: Fairway Press, 1990).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan