Luke 10:1-24 · Jesus Sends Out the Seventy-two
What Super Power Would You Choose?
Luke 10:1-11, 7-20
Sermon
by King Duncan
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When you were a kid what superpower did you want to have? Flying like Superman? Scaling tall buildings like Spiderman? What superpower did you want to have and how did you want to use it?

I thought about that recently when I saw a question which was posted on the website forum Reddit. The question was, “If you could have a useless superpower, what would it be?” Did you catch that--a useless superpower?

Here’s one response that came in to that question: “The ability to win at rock- paper-scissors every single time.” Well, I guess that certainly is a useless superpower.

Here are some other responses: “Whenever I pick up a sock, the sock next to it would become the matching one.” O. K.

One guy responded: “The power to be able to slam a revolving door.”

Another said, “When I catch a cold, the ability to know exactly where and when I got it.” I guess that would be for the purpose of retribution.

And finally, “Always knowing when to use a semicolon.” That must be for an English major.

What about you? What useless superpower would you wish for? It’s a fun question to consider because we all want to believe that we have untapped powers within us, and that we would have the courage to use those untapped powers if a need ever arises.

In our Bible passage today, Jesus sent out seventy-two of his followers as an advance team to prepare the people for his ministry. And he gave them power—super power, really—to heal diseases and cast out demons. He also gave them authority to preach about the kingdom of God. And when the disciples got back, they felt like superheroes! But their super powers were not useless. Far from it. They had healed people. They had cast out demons. And they had accomplished it all through Jesus’ name! Jesus was pleased with their work, but he didn’t want them to get big heads because of it. “Do not rejoice that the spirits submit to you,” he said, “but rejoice that your names are written in heaven.”

Author Corrie ten Boom once told the story of a woodpecker who tapped with his beak against the trunk of a tree just as lightning struck the tree and destroyed it. He flew away all excited, saying, “I didn’t know there was so much power in my beak!”

Corrie ten Boom wrote, “When we bring the Gospel [to people] there is a danger that we will think or say, ‘I have done a good job.’ Don’t be a silly woodpecker,” she continued. “Know where your strength comes from. It is only the Holy Spirit who can make a message good and fruitful.” (1)

The disciples were rejoicing in the things they had done. Jesus wanted them to understand that it was the power of the Holy Spirit that was accomplishing these things through them.

A father named Rusty Stevens tells a story which probably sounds familiar to many of you who are parents. Stevens was mowing the yard, rushing to get it done before dinner, when his six-year-old son, Mikey, decided to help him. Mikey stepped in front of his dad and put his hands on the mower handle. Stevens, like any good father, relaxed his pace and followed behind Mikey. The work slowed down to a crawl. Stevens chuckled inwardly as he thought about how much he wanted to get the job done quickly. But Mikey needed to help his dad. He needed to learn how to mow a lawn. And as slow and awkward as it was to share the work, it was an absolutely necessary part of father-son bonding.

Rusty Stevens says, “Suddenly, tears came to my eyes as it hit me: This is the way my heavenly Father allows me to ‘help’ him build his kingdom! I pictured my heavenly Father at work seeking, saving, and transforming the lost, and there I was, with my weak hands ‘helping.’ My Father could do the work by himself, but he doesn’t. He chooses to stoop gracefully to allow me to co-labor with him. Why? For my sake, because he wants me to have the privilege of ministering with him.” (2)

That’s how Jesus usually operated. He could have used miracles and wonders, or charisma and fear tactics to spread the message of the kingdom of God. He had the power to draw large crowds, and his teaching left his hearers amazed. So why did he send out these seventy-two to do the work he could have done more effectively himself? My guess is that it was for the same reason his last words to the church, recorded in Matthew 28:18-20, was that we should go make disciples of all nations.

Jesus sent the seventy-two out, first of all, because he knew that they needed to see what he saw. They needed to feel the hurts and hear the questions from people who are living and dying without any knowledge of God, without any hope for the future.         

Pastor Barbara Brown Taylor, in her book Speaking of Sin, recalls her seminary days. In her first term, she and her classmates were sent to serve as chaplains in hospitals and nursing homes. She found it easy and pleasant work to pray or counsel with the patients.

But everything changed in the second term. The seminary students were sent out to homeless shelters and soup kitchens in the rough part of the city. They saw how unjust social systems kept poor people poor. They saw how hard the inner-city citizens worked just to survive, to support their families, to get justice from a system that treated them like “garbage.” In that second term, Taylor wrote, “Most days, all we did was bandage them up and send them back out on the streets, so that they could get chewed up all over again.” (3)

Pastor Taylor and her colleagues needed to see the world as Jesus sees it---full of desperately hurting people who need the justice, hope and mercy of the kingdom of God. Hurting people need more than words. They need someone to come live in their neighborhood and witness their struggles.

The seventy-two that Jesus appointed to go ahead of him needed that experience as well . . . and so do. We need to get outside these four church walls to see the needs that Jesus saw. 

Jesus also sent out the seventy-two to do these works of ministry because you don’t really know what real joy is until you have put your faith into practice. It’s one thing to believe something with your head, it’s another for that belief to take residence in your heart. That only happens when you are actively practicing what you preach.

Pastor Fred Craddock tells of ministering at a church where the young people were accustomed to going on nice vacations over their summer break from school. Their families gave them everything; they didn’t have to work. So imagine their surprise when their new pastor suggested that they go on a work trip for their spring break. He sent them to a poor, rural county in Kentucky, where they repaired houses, and slept on the floor of churches, and used outhouses, and witnessed extreme poverty. As Craddock writes, “They got a baptism into reality.”

Isn’t that why Jesus sends us out to do his work—to give us a baptism into reality? What would it look like if we brought the kingdom of God to flophouses and soup kitchens and prisons and homeless shelters? Do we really believe in the justice and compassion and mercy of the kingdom of God, or do we just like to hear cheerful messages about it on Sunday? If the message of Jesus cannot hold up when faced with the cold, hard reality of people’s lives, then it’s not from God.

Craddock reports that he didn’t know how these privileged kids would respond to this baptism into reality until they got back home and were waiting around in the parking lot for their parents to pick them up. One kid spoke up and said, “This is the best tired I’ve ever been.” (4)

Some of you have experienced what he was describing. “This is the best tired I’ve ever been.” Like the seventy-two in today’s passage, this kid was rejoicing in the fact that God had used him for ministry. God had tired him out, and it was the best tired he’d ever been.

Pastor Kyle Idleman tells about a young father in his church whose life changed dramatically when he gave his life to Jesus. He cleaned up his life. He began tithing. He began talking about his faith with his family and friends.

This young man’s mother asked to meet with Pastor Idleman. She didn’t like the way her son had changed since he’d become a Christian. She didn’t like her son spending so much time at church or giving money to the church. She wasn’t interested in hearing about his faith or praying before meals. As she said to Pastor Idleman, “Can you please tell him that the Bible teaches ‘everything in moderation’? He’s taken this too far and he needs to understand that it doesn’t have to be all or nothing.” (5)

That hurts . . . and it’s not biblical. True, we are to use moderation in our eating and drinking (Phil. 4:5 KJV). However, it’s not biblical to be halfway committed or moderate about our faith. That’s why many people who say they follow Jesus don’t know real joy. They haven’t put their faith into action. This young man put his faith into action, and it changed his life.

A woman named Kathleen Brehony spent a year of her life traveling around the United States, looking for stories about people who have let their lives be changed by faith. Then she wrote a book about it, a book called Ordinary Grace. One of the stories she tells is about a couple named Bill and Susan Belfiore. They lived in Princeton, New Jersey, and had a good life, a prosperous life, a comfortable and happy life. And then one day they were watching a news show about orphans with HIV/AIDS in Romania.

Susan put in for a six-month leave-of-absence from her practice. That January, she flew to Romania. Eventually the Belfiores adopted five children from that orphanage. So what happened to the Belfiore’s comfortable life? Bill Belfiore describes it this way: “The children are incredible, and our life right now is beyond anything we could have imagined. They bring aliveness into our lives and we never would have lived so fully without them.” (6)

Don’t you think those seventy-two disciples would say the same thing about their ministry? “Our life right now is beyond anything we could have imagined.” Those seventy-two disciples that Jesus sent out saw God’s power in action, changing lives, and they came back from their mission overflowing with joy. And Jesus celebrated with them. He said that their ministry was defeating the power of Satan on earth.

And that’s the third reason that Jesus sent out the seventy-two. He had given them power to drive out Satan. Now I must tell you some devout Christians believe in a literal Satan. Some do not. For some, Satan is simply a name we give to the spirit of evil that sometimes inhabits the human heart. Regardless of how we feel about Satan, however, all of us will agree that we live in a world in which the power of hatred and injustice and cruelty are all too common. Where is hope in such a world? It is found in those who follow Jesus out into the world.

A woman named Carolyn Arends tells of hearing some missionaries speak at her church when she was a child. The missionaries told about an enormous snake that slithered into their home one day, and they didn’t know how to get it out. They ran to a neighbor, who came in with his machete and decapitated the giant snake on their kitchen floor.

Problem solved? Not exactly. The neighbor explained that large snakes like this take a long time to die. The blood is still flowing to their muscles and nerves, even when their head is removed. So the headless body of the snake was still thrashing around on the floor of their kitchen, making a lot of noise, acting like it was still alive. He told the missionaries to wait outside until they no longer heard the snake moving around.

The missionaries, still scared and sickened by the thought of the snake, did as they were told until it was safe to go inside. Then one of the missionaries said, “Satan is a lot like that big old snake. He’s already been defeated. He just doesn’t know it yet. In the meantime, he’s going to do some damage. But never forget that he’s a goner.” (7)

That is why Jesus sent out the seventy-two into the world and also why he sends us. First of all, he sends us out because he knows that we need to get outside these four church walls to see the needs that he sees. Secondly, he sends us out because you don’t really know what real joy is until you have put your faith into practice. And finally, he sends us out because sharing our faith and alleviating suffering in our community have the power to drive out everything we associate with the Prince of Darkness.

Jesus sends us out today like he sent out the seventy-two—to plant the kingdom of God in hearts and lives. After all, there is no superpower that can compare to the power of knowing God through Jesus Christ. This is the power that gives life meaning and purpose. This is the power that gives us our identity and self-worth. This is the power that allows us to overcome the world. And if your life has been changed by this power, then you are called to go, to witness, and to share the kingdom of God and the power of salvation with a hurting world.


1. Corrie Ten Boom in “Each New Day,” Christianity Today, March 9, 1992, p. 45.

2. The Rev. Douglas C. Hoglund, http://www.woodside-church.org/files/sermons/Sermon%20pdfs/Its%20Your%20Serve.pdf.

3. Cloning the Saints: A Post- modern Answer to Spiritual Formation? Edward L. Poling http://www.goomba.com/www2/edpoling/node50.html.

4. Fred B. Craddock, The Collected Sermons of Fred B. Craddock (Westminster: John Knox Press, 2011).

5. “Not A Fan: Are You A Fan Or A Follower?” By Kyle Idleman, https://www.sermoncentral.com/sermons/not-a-fan-are-you-a-fan-or-a-follower-kyle-idleman-sermon-on-commitment-to-christ-150356?ref=SermonSerps.

6. Kathleen A. Brehony, Ordinary Grace, pp. 1-2, 87-96; cited by Mark Barger Elliott in his paper on John 10:1-11 for the 2005 Moveable Feast. Cited by Rev. Karen Chakoian, http://www.granpres.org/Sermons/2007-02-04.htm.

7. Carolyn Arends, “Satan’s a Goner: A lesson from a Headless Snake,” Christianity Today (February, 2011) @Leadership Weekly. http://www.christianitytoday.com/.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Third Quarter 2019, by King Duncan