Lamp on a Stand
			
			Texts: 
			Matthew 5:14–16; Mark 4:21–25; Luke 8:16–18; 11:33–36 
			
			Introduction: 
			Light Meant to Be Seen 
			Jesus shows His disciples a household picture everyone understands. 
			A lamp belongs on a stand. When it sits in the open, light reaches 
			every corner of the room. He names His people “the light of the 
			world,” a city on a hill and a lamp that gives light to all who are 
			in the house (Matthew 5:14–16). He then adds lessons about hearing, 
			measuring, and inner sight (Mark 4:21–25; Luke 8:16–18; 11:33–36). 
			These passages shape a simple charge: live openly as Christ’s 
			people, listen carefully to His word, and keep the inner eye clear 
			so the whole life shines. 
			
			Light: Our 
			Given Identity 
			Jesus assigns identity before action. “You are the light of the 
			world.” This comes with purpose: “that they may see your good works 
			and glorify your Father in heaven” (Matthew 5:16). The world needs 
			moral clarity, truthful speech, clean conduct, and steady kindness. 
			God intends that clarity to come through visible deeds that point 
			upward. Good works function like windows. People look through them 
			and see the Father’s goodness. 
			
			Where the 
			Lamp Belongs 
			“Nor do they light a lamp and put it under a basket” (Matthew 5:15). 
			Lamps sit on stands. That means public placement—homes, workplaces, 
			schools, neighborhoods, and congregations. Hidden discipleship loses 
			reach. A city on a hill draws eyes; a lamp on a stand reaches “all 
			who are in the house.” The Lord positions His people for influence. 
			Courage accepts the stand and uses the reach. 
			
			How Light 
			Spreads: Hearing and Measuring 
			In Mark 4:21–25 Jesus ties light to listening. “If anyone has ears 
			to hear, let him hear.” He calls for careful hearing and fair 
			measuring: “With the same measure you use, it will be measured to 
			you; and to you who hear, more will be given.” Generous attention to 
			the word grows understanding; careless attention shrinks it. The 
			person who receives truth gains capacity for more. The person who 
			discards truth loses even earlier gains. Light grows where hearts 
			welcome instruction and practice it. 
			
			Take Care 
			How You Hear 
			Luke records, “Take heed how you hear” (Luke 8:18). Listening 
			carries responsibility. Treat the word as seed. Prepare the heart. 
			Remove distractions that choke understanding. Return again and again 
			to the text until the meaning becomes plain. Then act. Hearing 
			without action dims the lamp; hearing unto obedience brightens the 
			room. 
			
			The Eye and 
			the Body 
			“The lamp of the body is the eye” (Luke 11:34). Inner vision guides 
			outward life. When the eye stays single—fixed on the Lord’s will—the 
			whole person fills with light. When the eye divides—pulled by double 
			aims—shadows spread. Guard inputs. Choose companions, media, and 
			habits that steady the gaze. Set your focus on what is pure, 
			honorable, and true, so the light within does not turn to darkness. 
			
			Threats 
			That Dim the Lamp 
			Baskets come in many shapes. Fear of people silences witness. 
			Busyness keeps deeds from maturing. Secret sin muddies influence. 
			Hardened opinions block teachability. Pride steals glory that 
			belongs to the Father. Each of these needs deliberate removal. Lift 
			the lamp where God set it. Clear the lens. Keep the oil of daily 
			discipline—Scripture, prayer, service, integrity—so the flame burns 
			steady. 
			
			What People 
			See When the Lamp Stands High 
			The world watches ordinary moments. Truthful invoices, kept 
			promises, reconciled relationships, calm words under pressure, 
			hospitality to the overlooked, mercy toward opponents, faithfulness 
			in marriage, and diligence in work—these deeds give light to “all 
			who are in the house.” When neighbors ask about hope, answer with 
			Scripture and humility. When enemies wound, repay with goodness. 
			When blessings arrive, give thanks to the Father openly. Visibility 
			joined to holiness sends the beam far. 
			
			Measure, 
			Then Multiply 
			“Take heed what you hear” (Mark 4:24). Test every tradition by 
			Scripture. Keep what aligns with the Lord’s teaching; let go of what 
			elevates human rules (Matthew 15:9; Colossians 2:8). Extend the same 
			measure to others that you expect from God: fairness, patience, and 
			truth. God honors honest measures. Light multiplies where people 
			handle the word carefully and treat others righteously. 
			
			Judgment 
			and Accountability 
			Jesus speaks plainly about outcomes: “Whoever has, to him more will 
			be given; and whoever does not have, even what he seems to have will 
			be taken from him” (Luke 8:18). Opportunity comes through hearing; 
			increase follows obedience; loss follows neglect. The Lord will 
			assess every house. A life arranged by His words stands in the storm 
			and shines at the end. 
			
			Putting the 
			Lamp on Its Stand Today 
			Begin at home. Read Scripture aloud. Pray specific prayers. Restore 
			strained ties. Teach your children the sayings of Jesus and model 
			them. Step into the congregation’s work. Teach, encourage, visit, 
			and serve. Carry the light into community life. Practice honesty at 
			work, purity online, gentleness in disputes, and generosity with 
			time and goods. Let the Father receive the praise. 
			
			Conclusion: 
			Shine Where God Has Placed You 
			Jesus names His people light and hands them a stand. He calls for 
			careful hearing, fair measuring, and single vision. Rooms brighten 
			when lamps take their place. Houses brighten when deeds align with 
			the Lord’s sayings. Cities brighten when congregations live openly 
			as His people. Place the lamp high and keep it burning. 
			
			Exhaustive 
			Sermon Outline 
			
				- 
				
Opening: 
				Identity and purpose of light 
					- 
					
Matthew 
					5:14–16—light, city, lamp, stand, glory to the Father  
				 
				 
				- 
				
Placement: 
				Public visibility 
				 
				- 
				
Hearing: 
				Pathway to greater light 
				 
				- 
				
Inner sight: 
				The eye’s role 
				 
				- 
				
Threats that 
				hide the lamp 
					- 
					
Fear, 
					busyness, secret sin, hardened opinions, pride  
				 
				 
				- 
				
What light 
				looks like in daily life 
					- 
					
					Truthfulness, integrity, reconciliation, mercy, hospitality, 
					diligence, gratitude  
					- 
					
1 Peter 
					2:12; Philippians 2:15—visible goodness in a crooked 
					generation  
				 
				 
				- 
				
Measuring 
				and testing 
				 
				- 
				
				Accountability and outcome 
				 
				- 
				
Applications 
				 
				- 
				
Invitation 
					- 
					
Hear, 
					believe, repent, confess Christ, be baptized for the 
					remission of sins (Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16)  
					- 
					
Continue 
					in obedient living so the lamp grows brighter (James 
					1:22–25)  
				 
				 
			 
			
			Call to 
			Action 
			Lift the lamp. Choose one setting this week—home, work, school, 
			neighborhood—and place your light on the stand through a clear act 
			of obedience: speak truth, repair a wrong, extend mercy, or share 
			the gospel. Hear the Lord’s sayings, measure generously, and obey 
			today so the room brightens and the Father receives glory. 
			
			Scripture 
			Reference List 
			
				- 
				
Matthew 
				5:14–16—Identity and purpose of light; good works lead observers 
				to glorify the Father  
				- 
				
Mark 
				4:21–25—Lamp, hearing, and measuring; growth follows careful 
				attention and practice  
				- 
				
Luke 
				8:16–18—Visibility and “take heed how you hear”; responsibility 
				attached to hearing  
				- 
				
Luke 
				11:33–36—Eye as lamp; single focus fills life with light  
				- 
				
1 Peter 
				2:12—Honorable conduct so observers glorify God  
				- 
				
Philippians 
				2:15—Blameless living as lights in a crooked generation  
				- 
				
Colossians 
				2:8—Warning against human philosophies that displace Christ’s 
				teaching  
				- 
				
Matthew 
				15:9—Doctrines of men produce vain worship  
				- 
				
James 
				1:22–25—Doers of the word shine through practiced obedience  
				- 
				
Mark 
				16:16—Belief and baptism in response to the gospel  
				- 
				
Acts 
				22:16—Baptism washes away sins, calling on the Lord’s name  
			 
			
			Prepared by David Hersey of the church of Christ at 
			Granby, MO  |