Luke 12:22-34 · Do Not Worry
Wake Up! Get Ready!
Luke 12:32-40
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Do you ever feel like you spend your life waiting on other people to get ready? Or are you on the other side of this equation? Maybe you’re the one who can never be on time, and other people are constantly nagging you to hurry up.

Parents often feel like their life is one long cycle of “hurry up and wait.” A dad named Rodney LaCroix posted the following thoughts on Twitter:

What I say: Be ready, we are leaving in five minutes.

What the child hears: Get undressed. Start finger painting. Lose at least one shoe. (1)

Kids can be forgiven for not understanding the concept of “Get ready.” But it’s a lot harder to laugh it off when it happens to us adults.

Actor Chester Gregory says that he suffered from insomnia a few years ago. One night during a big show, he fell asleep in his dressing room. He woke up to hear the backstage staff paging him over the intercom. It sounds like every actor’s worst nightmare! He rushed on stage just in time to cover his mistake. But he claims that this moment cured his insomnia. He never fell asleep on the job after that. (2)

In today’s lesson from Luke’s Gospel, Jesus is trying to prepare his disciples to carry on his work after his death. He’s been trying to warn them about this for a while now, but they just don’t understand. It’s kind of like Rodney LaCroix’s tweet about “What I say” versus “What they hear.” This whole chapter of Luke 12 could be titled, “Wake Up! Get Ready!” And we need to pay close attention to it because its message is just as relevant for us today as it was for the disciples 2,000 years ago.

Last week we talked about having a foolish perspective on our lives. We said that based on what the Bible says about foolishness, we could define a fool as someone who lives only for themselves and only for the moment. In these verses, Jesus is trying to remove our greed and worry by focusing our minds on the future that God has planned for us. In fact, the central message of Luke 12 can be summed up in our first verse of this passage, verse 32. I challenge every one of us to commit this verse to memory this week because if we really believed this one verse, it would change how we live our lives. It would change how we view the future. It would change our priorities. It would fuel our courage.

But before we read verse 32, let’s put it in context. Jesus’ ministry has become so popular that he and his disciples are being followed by a crowd of “many thousands” of people. The crowd is so rowdy that they are trampling each other. This would be the perfect moment for Jesus to perform a few miracles or a fire-breathing sermon. Anything to wow the crowd. But Jesus knows two things that his disciples don’t:

1) that popularity is not a measure of success in God’s eyes; obedience is.

2) And that he is on the way to Jerusalem and to his death on a cross.

So instead of impressing the crowd, Jesus addresses his disciples.

Our lesson begins with these words in verse 32: “Do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has been pleased to give you the kingdom.” This is your memory verse. “Do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has been pleased to give you the kingdom.”

Jesus knows that after his arrest and execution, his disciples will become religious outcasts and enemies of the state. Their lives will be in danger. And they will spend the rest of their lives facing persecution, beatings, imprisonment and martyrdom as they spread Jesus’ message to the ends of the earth. If they’re going to persevere through all this, they need to see the future through Jesus’ eyes.

Imagine that for one day you could see your future through Jesus’ eyes. What would be different about it? What questions would it answer? One thing we know for sure, if we could see our future through Jesus’ eyes, we would refuse to live in fear.

I read a funny story about a computer glitch that affected a sports-betting site in Australia. Some customers on a website named IASbet discovered that the site inadvertently was allowing fans to place bets on past horse races. What happens if you place a bet on a horse race that has already been won? You win a lot of money!

Instead of alerting the IASbet folks to the glitch, these fans placed their bets and won some money. Most of these customers placed small bets just to test the system. Only one man placed a big enough bet to trigger an investigation by the website’s owners. What a temptation! He couldn’t lose! He already knew the outcomes of the races, so he had no fear of risking his money. (3)

Jesus is telling his disciples here, “I already know the end of the story. I know the outcome of your race. ‘Do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has been pleased to give you the kingdom.’” If you were to read through the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, you would see that almost every encounter with God, an angel of God, or Jesus begins with some variation of “Don’t be afraid!” It’s as common as you or I beginning an encounter with the word “Hi!” That seems to be God’s favorite greeting: “Don’t be afraid!”

The disciples need to stand firm in the unshakeable truth that God is their Father, and they are heirs to all the riches of God’s kingdom. The riches of peace with God. Eternal life. The fruits of the Spirit—love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. That’s their treasure that will never wear out or fail. And it’s our treasure too. If you really believed this verse, it would change your life. So that’s the first thing Jesus is teaching us in this passage: if we could see our future through his eyes, we would refuse to live in fear.

The second thing Jesus is teaching us in this passage is to let go of the things that control us. He says, “Sell your possessions and give to the poor. Provide purses for yourselves that will not wear out, a treasure in heaven that will never fail, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

I believe Jesus meant these words literally and figuratively. God cares passionately about the poor and needy. You can’t read through the Bible and miss this truth. So giving what you have to provide for the needy is a Biblical mandate. But Jesus also came to set us free from the burdens and fears of this world. Once we’ve been set free, then we can focus our energies on creating God’s kingdom on this earth. Listen to these words, people: Your Father has already given you the kingdom, you have a treasure in heaven that will never fail—why is your heart still tied to this world?

Author David Goetz wrote a book called Death by Suburb: How to Keep the Suburbs from Killing Your Soul. In this book he says that chasing after “immortality symbols” distracts us from living as followers of Jesus. We get so tied to status and comfort and achievement. We find our identity in our jobs. We find our self-worth in our paycheck or our possessions. We spend our lives building up and protecting our own little comfortable, safe existence. And we completely miss the calling to follow Jesus as citizens of a heavenly kingdom. (4) 

There is an old story about a court jester who was once given a wand by the nobleman he served. “Keep this,” said the nobleman, “until you find a greater fool than yourself.”

The jester put away the wand and kept it for many years. One day the nobleman lay dying. Calling the jester to his side he said, “I am going on a long journey.”

The jester asked, “Where to?”

The nobleman shrugged his shoulders. “For how long?” asked the jester.

“Forever,” replied the nobleman weakly.

“What provisions have you made for your journey?” asked the jester. “None,” answered the nobleman.

“Then,” said the jester, “Take this,” handing the nobleman his wand. “For you are a greater fool than I am.”

Who is the greater fool: the one who focuses his life on collecting and protecting stuff that will wear out, fail, and get eaten by moths? Or the one who spends his life sharing with Christ the work of creating the kingdom of God on earth?

And how do we create the kingdom of God on earth? The last part of this passage tells us: “Be dressed ready for service and keep your lamps burning, like servants waiting for their master to return from a wedding banquet, so that when he comes and knocks they can immediately open the door for him. It will be good for those servants whose master finds them watching when he comes. Truly I tell you, he will dress himself to serve, will have them recline at the table and will come and wait on them.”

The final thing Jesus is teaching us in this passage is that our service to others makes us ready to serve him when he comes again. When you serve the people around you with love and humility, you are serving Jesus. You are living out the purpose for which God made you. You will find yourself, your highest identity and purpose and joy, in caring for others just as Jesus cared for them.

A man named Ron told the story of how God woke him up from a life that was meaningless and out of control. Ron began using alcohol at a young age, then moved on to methamphetamine. He drifted into adulthood with no purpose. His addiction caused him to lose custody of his daughter.

Then in 2012, Ron was in a car accident that should’ve killed him. Somehow, he survived. And the trauma of the accident caused him to question why God would spare his life. Ron checked himself into a hospital psychiatric ward. From there he looked for help at a place called Hope Ministries in Des Moines, Iowa. Hope Ministries provides shelter and recovery services for people struggling with substance abuse problems.

At first, Ron just wanted a place to stay. He wasn’t sure he was ready to deal with his addictions. But the prayers and support he received at Hope Ministries made him re-think his path in life. He said, “I looked back at my life and all the choices I’d made, the holes in my soul that I’d tried to fill through my addictions. I surrendered my life to Christ and that’s the one choice that has changed my entire life.”

Ron entered the recovery program. He re-connected with his daughter. He got a job. With his commitment to following Jesus and the support of his new friends, Ron re-built his life and graduated from the program in July 2020.

And he is committing his life to helping others in the same way he has been helped. His life goal now is “loving and serving others.” As he says, “That’s what I want to do with the rest of my life—serve others and show them there is hope in this world and there is love that truly exists.” (5)

Many years ago, Mother Teresa met with Dr. Robert Schuller, the pastor of the Crystal Cathedral in California. Dr. Schuller was in awe of Mother Teresa’s ministries to the poor in Calcutta, India. She had devoted her life to serving the neediest, most destitute people in Calcutta, and has been instrumental in starting similar ministries around the world. Dr. Schuller asked Mother Teresa for some words of wisdom for his ministry. He was so moved by what she said that he had her words engraved into a plaque which he hung on his office wall.

Mother Teresa told Dr. Schuller, “Be all and only for Jesus. Let Him use you without consulting you first.” (6)

“Be all and only for Jesus. Let Him use you without consulting you first.” That’s what it means to be dressed ready for service. What would have to change in your life for you to be ready for service? What fears would you have to overcome? What priorities would you have to change? And what could God do through you if you let God use you without consulting you first? Yes, that’s a scary question. Jesus knew it would be. So remember his words that are as true for us today as they were for his disciples 2,000 years ago: “Do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has been pleased to give you the kingdom.”


1. Posted by @RodLacroix cited in “The Funniest Tweets From Parents This Week October 10-16, 2020” by Caroline Bologna, https://www.huffpost.com/entry/funniest-parenting-tweets_l_5f89dd51c5b62dbe71c284a9.

2. “60 Actors Reveal Their Worst Flubbed Lines and Onstage Mishaps” by Playbill Staff, November 27, 2016, http://www.playbill.com/article/60-actors-reveal-their-worst-flubbed-lines-and-onstage-mishaps

3. Australian Rick Broadhead, Dear Valued Customer: You Are a Loser (Kansas City: Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2004), p. 113.

4. Death by Suburb: How to Keep the Suburbs from Killing Your Soul by David Goetz. Cited by Steve Thomason, https://www.stevethomason.net/2013/02/21/ash-wednesday-sermon-ash-moments-luke-951-62/.

5. https://www.hopeiowa.org/featured-stories/rons-story/.

6. Robert H. Schuller, Turning Hurts into Halos (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1999), p. 66.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Third Quarter Sermons, by King Duncan