Prepare to Teach

Luke 6:46-49

The true disciple builds on Jesus’ words by obeying them.

Scripture Text

6:46 “Why do You call me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ and don’t do the things which I say?

6:47 Everyone who comes to me, and hears my words, and does them, I will show You who He is like.

6:48 He is like a man building a house, who dug and went deep, and laid a foundation on the rock. When a flood arose, the stream broke against that house, and could not shake it, because it was founded on the rock.

6:49 But He who hears, and doesn’t do, is like a man who built a house on the earth without a foundation, against which the stream broke, and immediately it fell, and the ruin of that house was great.”

Anchor

The true disciple builds on Jesus’ words by obeying them.

Calling Jesus 'Lord' without doing what He says is self-deception; the stable life is built by coming to Jesus, hearing His words, and putting them into practice.

Point of Contact

The church must not confuse religious correctness, verbal confession, social respectability, or emotional admiration with true discipleship. Jesus demands mercy, obedience, heart transformation, and lives built on His words.

Rhythm
  1. Jesus' lordship over Sabbath Two Sabbath controversies reveal Jesus' authority over Sabbath interpretation and expose religious opposition to mercy.
  2. Jesus forms apostolic leadership through prayer Before naming the Twelve, Jesus withdraws in prayer, showing that kingdom leadership is formed under divine purpose.
  3. Jesus ministers to Israel's and the nations' needy crowds A broad multitude comes to hear, be healed, and be freed from unclean spirits, and Jesus' power restores them.
  4. Jesus declares the upside-down blessedness of His kingdom Blessings and woes reverse common assumptions about poverty, hunger, grief, rejection, wealth, fullness, laughter, and popularity.
  5. Jesus commands enemy-love shaped by the Father's mercy Kingdom disciples love, do good, bless, pray, give, and show mercy beyond ordinary reciprocity.
  6. Jesus exposes hypocrisy and demands heart-level integrity Judgment, forgiveness, giving, correction, fruit, and speech all reveal the heart and require humble self-examination.
  7. Jesus demands obedient hearing Calling Jesus 'Lord' without doing what He says is exposed as foundationless religion.
Crucial Turning Point

Luke moves from Sabbath controversy to apostolic formation, from healing power to kingdom teaching, and from blessing and enemy-love to the demand for obedient foundations under Jesus' word.

Luke 6 argues that Jesus' authority governs Sabbath, leadership, healing, ethics, judgment, speech, and discipleship. His lordship exposes religious hardness that objects to mercy. His prayerful appointment of the Twelve forms the apostolic foundation of His people. His healing power reveals the kingdom's restoring mercy. His teaching overturns worldly measures of blessing and demands enemy-love rooted in the Father's mercy. His final warning shows that true discipleship is not verbal honor but obedient hearing.

Theological logic
  1. Jesus possesses authority to interpret and fulfill the Sabbath.
  2. Sabbath is rightly aligned with mercy and life, not accusation and harm.
  3. Religious opposition can become enraged by mercy when authority is threatened.
  4. Jesus forms His apostolic people through prayerful divine purpose.
  5. Jesus' kingdom power restores the afflicted and oppressed.
  6. The kingdom reverses fallen measures of blessedness and success.
  7. Kingdom ethics are rooted in the mercy of God rather than social reciprocity.
  8. Merciful discipleship requires humble self-examination before correction.
  9. The heart is revealed by fruit and speech.
  10. True confession of Jesus as Lord requires obedience to His words.
Watch Out
  • Using the passage to teach salvation by self-generated works. Jesus exposes false profession; obedience is the fruit and evidence of true submission, not autonomous self-salvation.
  • Assuming verbal confession does not matter. Calling Jesus Lord is right and necessary, but Jesus warns against confession without obedience.
  • Treating hearing as enough. Both builders hear in the broader teaching context; the difference is doing or not doing.
  • Making the flood only ordinary life trouble. The flood includes crisis and testing, with judgment overtones because it reveals ultimate foundation and ruin.
  • Equating obedience with perfectionism. Jesus calls for practiced submission, not sinless perfection; genuine disciples repent and return to His words.
  • Turning foundation imagery into generic self-help stability. The foundation is specifically obedient response to Jesus’ words under His lordship.
Invitation Arc
Response
  • Identify one situation where doing good is being delayed by fear, criticism, or religious defensiveness.
  • Pray deliberately before making or confirming leadership decisions.
  • Compare personal definitions of blessing with Jesus' blessings and woes.
  • Choose one enemy or difficult person and practice blessing, prayer, and concrete good.
  • Before correcting someone, name and address the plank that may be in Your own eye.
  • Review recent speech as evidence of heart treasure.
  • Choose one command of Jesus in Luke 6 and put it into concrete practice this week.
  • Evaluate whether Your confession of Jesus as Lord is matched by obedience.
Formation Aim

Merciful, prayerful, enemy-loving, self-examining, fruitful, obedient disciples who honor Jesus as Lord in practice.

Canonical Thread
  • David and consecrated bread : Jesus appeals to David's action to defend His disciples and reveal His own authority.
  • Sabbath and mercy : Jesus' Sabbath healings align the Sabbath with life, mercy, and restoration.
  • Twelve and Israel : The choosing of twelve apostles evokes the twelve tribes and signals the formation of the renewed people around Jesus.
  • Blessings and woes in covenant tradition : Jesus' blessings and woes stand within the covenantal and prophetic tradition of life, warning, reversal, and judgment.
  • Rejected prophets : Jesus connects His persecuted disciples to the prophets rejected before them.
  • Merciful character of God : Jesus roots enemy-love in the mercy of the Most High.
  • Love of neighbor expanded : Jesus intensifies love beyond natural reciprocity into active enemy-love.
  • Heart, fruit, and speech : Jesus' teaching on fruit and speech develops the biblical theme that outward life reveals inward treasure.
  • Rock foundation : Jesus' house-on-rock imagery fits the biblical pattern of the Lord and His word as the only stable foundation.
Gospel Clarity

The gospel calls sinners not merely to admire Jesus or address Him with religious titles, but to come under His lordship. Grace does not produce foundationless hearers; it creates obedient disciples who receive Christ’s word, practice it, and endure because their lives are built on Him.