Flashback Episode — Come, Hear, and Obey: Luke 6:46-49


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If you have ever picked up your Bible to read a specific passage and the opening line hits you in a way you never realized before, this describes me as I picked up the Bible to prepare for this week’s podcast. While the teaching we are looking at is one of Jesus’ more famous illustrations, I believe there is a lot that we can discover about God that many of us may have missed when hearing or reading this illustration before.

However, before getting to the illustration itself, Luke’s gospel has Jesus lead into this illustration with a thought-provoking and challenging question. One reason we might miss this is that too often, we only look at this teaching from Matthew’s gospel, and while there are plenty of similarities between both gospels, there are enough unique features that make Luke’s description of Jesus’ illustration just as profound, or perhaps even more profound, than Matthew’s version.

So before diving into the illustration, let’s read the question that jumped off the page as I was preparing for this episode, before continuing into the illustration itself. We will be reading from the gospel of Luke, chapter 6, using the God’s Word translation. Starting in verse 46, Jesus challenges those present by saying:

46 “Why do you call me Lord but don’t do what I tell you?

This question is powerful in my mind because it reemphasizes the root meaning of a name for Jesus that has unfortunately become a cliché in the Christian world.

The word Lord in this case not only refers to God, the ruler of the universe, but it also carries with it the secondary meaning of noble or king. With this secondary meaning, we see a more practical reason for God or Jesus to be the one to make the rules.

However, in the case of this question, Jesus is not asking people to call Him Lord. Instead, He is challenging them for using that term in a shallow way. If we truly choose to call Jesus “Lord”, then all of the implications of this word should be applied, and specifically the idea that a person who calls another person “lord” is acknowledging that they are that individual’s “subject”.

This question is powerful, not only to understand that those living while Jesus was walking the earth in the first century didn’t completely obey, but because ever since that point, a majority of Jesus’ followers want to pick and choose exactly “how” they will follow Jesus.

By picking and choosing what commands to obey, Christianity has cheapened the concept of Lord, and eroded the powerful nature of this name for God.

Let’s continue reading and see how Jesus illustrates this idea. Picking back up in verse 47, Jesus continues by saying:

47 “I will show you what everyone who comes to me, hears what I say, and obeys it is like. 48 He is like a person who dug down to bedrock to lay the foundation of his home. When a flood came, the floodwaters pushed against that house. But the house couldn’t be washed away because it had a good foundation. 49 The person who hears what I say but doesn’t obey it is like someone who built a house on the ground without any foundation. The floodwaters pushed against it, and that house quickly collapsed and was destroyed.”

We often read Matthew’s description of this illustration, and picture in our minds a house high on the rocks of a cliff, overlooking another house built on the sand of a beach. However, Luke describes something different.

What we see in Luke could be identical looking homes on the surface, but one was built with a solid foundation that dug into the earth, while the other one was hastily built on the ground and they chose to skip the foundation. The only difference between these two homes is the foundation, and the only difference in the description of these two contrasting homes is that the second home, the one with no foundation, is built by the person who comes, hears, but does not obey.

This then implies that the only real value of coming and hearing Jesus is if it translates into obedience. Hearing without acting is as useful as reading a book while ignoring its content. We could also apply this into the spiritual framework by saying that faith, without some visible evidence of it – also known as works – is dead.

In many ways, this is the perfect illustration for Jesus’ challenging question. This question and the illustration are not intended for those who have chosen to live a life that rejects God’s rule. Those people are not likely to call Jesus or God using the term “Lord”. Instead, this opening to our illustration describes an average Christian when compared with a dedicated disciple of Jesus.

This illustration emphasizes that the foundation of a home, specifically the part of the house that is the least visible to those passing by, is the most important. In the exact same way, when we look at someone’s life, the foundation of that life is the least visible part of it to those who are looking from the outside, but the foundation of that person’s life is the most important.

In this illustration, we see the two parallel ideas of faith and works being blended into the idea of obedience. If we don’t have faith, there is no reason for us to obey, and if we don’t obey, then the faith we claim to have has no foundation.

We can illustrate this by describing two people: both are very generous, very friendly, likeable to most everyone, humble, and a pleasure to be around. For the purposes of this discussion, their outer lives look identical.

However, one person has chosen to live their life this way because of the way he feels when surrounded by others. He enjoys people and has determined that these actions are the best actions to take for attracting people to be with.

The other person has chosen this life because it is a life that models what he sees Jesus as like in the gospels. While the first person’s private life is filled with acquiring conversation material, based on following the latest television shows and other media, the second person has filled his private life with prayer and study, in order to grow closer to God and to learn more about Jesus.

While this example is in some ways cheesy and cliché for a Christian to use, it describes too many people living today – specifically people who would call Jesus “Lord”. Too many of those who would call Jesus “Lord” spend less than 2 hours with Him each week – and that is a 2 hour block of time on the weekend, when it’s convenient.

If this was all the time God had available to spend with us, then we would have to make due, but the very nature of God invites us to spend 24/7 with Him – which does not mean that we leave town to join a monastery, but it does mean that we bring God into our daily lives and make time to spend with Him each day.

Living with God is living in a way that acknowledges God is with us when we sleep, when we are awake, when we are driving to work, and when we are facing the daily challenges of work. He is with us when we are running errands, preparing our next meal, and joking around with our friends. If we call Him “Lord” and we believe He is omnipresent, which is a fancy word for everywhere, it might be worthwhile to both obey and acknowledge His presence as we go throughout the week.

And because God is with us at all times, because we have chosen to call Him “Lord”, and because He has challenged us with this truth, we should work on obeying and building a foundation in our lives that emphasizes our dependence on Him. Luke’s version of Jesus’ parable is what prompted me to create Reflective Bible Study, and it is because I wanted a good way to personally study and grow my foundation with God, and I wanted to help share what I found with others, including you!

As we come to the close of another podcast episode, here are the challenges I will leave you with:

If you have chosen to call God using the term “Lord”, then intentionally focus on obeying what He has commanded us to do. This includes things like loving others and being generous, but there is so much more we can learn about obedience from the Bible when we study about what it means to obey God.

With that in mind, continue praying and studying the Bible for yourself, because personal Bible study, when it is combined with honest, humble prayer will help grow your foundation with God. When opening the Bible, don’t read with the goal of placing your opinions onto the pages. Instead, read with the frame of mind that God wants to teach you something about Himself within what you are reading.

And as I end every set of challenges by saying in one way or another, never stop short of, back away from, chicken out of, or walk away from where God wants to lead you to in your life with Him!

Flashback Episode: Year 3 – Episode 12: Leading into a parable Jesus shares about two almost identical homes, discover how Jesus opens this teaching by asking a powerful question, and how the one thing that separates these two homes is a decision we all make for ourselves.

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