Places of Honor / Humility
			Luke 14:7–11 
			
			Opening: 
			Seating Charts and the Heart 
			Jesus watched guests choose the best seats at a meal in a ruler of 
			the Pharisees’ house. He told a story everyone at the table 
			understood: when invited to a wedding feast, choose the lowest 
			place. If the host calls you up, you receive honored seating before 
			all. If you seize a high place and are told to move down, the walk 
			of shame follows. He then gave the principle that governs the 
			kingdom: “Whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles 
			himself will be exalted” (Luke 14:11). The story exposes motives and 
			trains disciples to pursue the low place on purpose. 
			
			Setting the 
			Scene: An Eye on First Chairs 
			Luke places this teaching after a Sabbath healing and a quiet 
			scrutiny of Jesus by the religious elite (Luke 14:1–6). The meal 
			that followed revealed another disease—an appetite for status. 
			People reached for prominent seats because they measured worth by 
			visibility. Jesus redirected their attention from position to 
			character, from self-promotion to integrity before God. 
			
			A Wisdom 
			Thread Through Scripture 
			Long before this banquet, wisdom urged restraint: “Do not put 
			yourself forward in the king’s presence…for it is better to be told, 
			‘Come up here,’ than to be put lower” (Proverbs 25:6–7). The 
			apostles echo the same thread: “Let nothing be done through selfish 
			ambition or conceit; in lowliness of mind let each esteem others 
			better than himself” (Philippians 2:3). “Humble yourselves…He will 
			lift you up” (James 4:10; 1 Peter 5:6). The Lord’s words in Luke 14 
			stand within this steady call to quiet, deliberate humility. 
			
			What 
			Humility Looks Like at the Table 
			The Lord’s counsel reaches further than dining etiquette. Humility 
			chooses service before recognition, responsibility before rank, and 
			obedience before display. It listens first, speaks after, and 
			refuses to measure worth by applause. It yields preferences to honor 
			others, assigns high value to those with little public weight, and 
			answers God’s call without bargaining for better placement (Romans 
			12:3, 10, 16; Proverbs 27:2). 
			
			Why the 
			Lower Place Matters 
			The lower place protects the soul. It keeps pride from taking root, 
			keeps comparisons from stealing joy, and keeps ambition from shaping 
			decisions. The lower place also creates room for God to act. 
			Exaltation belongs to Him; timing and degree sit in His hand 
			(Matthew 23:12). Those who chase honor usually find embarrassment; 
			those who choose humility often find influence they never sought. 
			The parable trains us to leave promotions to the Host. 
			
			A Word to 
			Hosts and Guests 
			Jesus applied the lesson to hosts in the very next breath: invite 
			those who cannot repay—“the poor, the maimed, the lame, the 
			blind”—and expect reward at the resurrection (Luke 14:12–14). Guests 
			learn to take the low seat. Hosts learn to set a table for those 
			without leverage. Both learn to act without calculating return. This 
			is humility with sleeves rolled up. 
			
			Testing Our 
			Motives in the Assembly 
			Congregational life offers frequent seating charts of the heart. 
			Tasks with few thanks, prayers offered when nerves shake, classes 
			taught when time runs short, visits made when schedules strain—these 
			moments reveal what we seek. The Lord’s pattern holds: do all by His 
			authority, seek His approval, and let Him handle honor (Colossians 
			3:17; 1 Corinthians 4:6). Reputation grows healthy when obedience 
			becomes our only aim. 
			
			Christ, Our 
			Pattern of Humility 
			No one embodied the low place like Jesus. Though worthy of every 
			seat, He washed feet, ate with the overlooked, and accepted the path 
			of a servant (Matthew 20:26–28; Philippians 2:5–8). His resurrection 
			and exaltation validate the path He prescribes. Following His steps 
			aligns us with the way God works. 
			
			How to 
			Choose the Low Place Today 
			Begin the day with a settled decision to honor others. Speak 
			truthfully without self-display. Defer when conscience permits. Take 
			assignments that cost time and comfort. Give without announcing. 
			When recognized, give thanks and point upward. When passed over, 
			give thanks and keep working. The banquet Host sees every seat taken 
			for His name. 
			
			Invitation 
			and Assurance 
			The kingdom welcomes those who step down to follow the King. 
			Entrance belongs to those who do the Father’s will (Matthew 7:21) 
			and continue in obedient faith, for He is the author of eternal 
			salvation to all who obey (Hebrews 5:9). Believe the gospel, repent 
			of sins, confess Christ, and be baptized for the remission of sins 
			(Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21). Then walk 
			humbly with God (Micah 6:8) and let Him assign the seating. 
			
			Exhaustive 
			Sermon Outline 
			
			
			Call to 
			Action 
			Pick the lowest seat three times this week. Choose one unnoticed 
			task at church, one quiet act of generosity, and one conversation 
			where you elevate another’s name above your own. Record the choices. 
			Pray over them. Keep choosing the low place until it becomes your 
			favorite chair. 
			
			Scripture 
			Reference List (with notes) 
			
				- 
				
Luke 14:7–11 
				— Parable and principle of humility at a feast  
				- 
				
Proverbs 
				25:6–7 — Wisdom about waiting to be invited higher  
				- 
				
Philippians 
				2:3–8 — Lowliness of mind; Christ’s self-emptying and service  
				- 
				
James 
				4:6,10; 1 Peter 5:5–6 — God opposes pride; He lifts the humble  
				- 
				
Romans 
				12:3,10,16 — Sober self-assessment; honoring others; associating 
				with the lowly  
				- 
				
Matthew 
				23:12 — Exaltation belongs to God; humility precedes honor  
				- 
				
Luke 18:9–14 
				— Pharisee and tax collector; humility commended  
				- 
				
Matthew 
				20:26–28 — Greatness expressed through service  
				- 
				
Luke 
				14:12–14 — Invite the unrepayable guest; reward at the 
				resurrection  
				- 
				
Colossians 
				3:17; 1 Corinthians 4:6; Deuteronomy 4:2 — Authority and the 
				safeguarded pattern  
				- 
				
Matthew 5:16 
				— Good works that glorify the Father  
				- 
				
Matthew 7:21 
				— Doing the Father’s will and the kingdom  
				- 
				
Hebrews 5:9 
				— Salvation connected to obedience  
				- 
				
Mark 16:16; 
				Acts 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21 — Appointed response to 
				the gospel  
				- 
				
Micah 6:8 — 
				Walking humbly with God  
			 
			
			Prepared by David Hersey of the church of Christ at 
			Granby, MO  |