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			 Wise and Foolish Builders 
			Matthew 7:24–27; Luke 6:47–49 
			Opening: Two Houses, One Storm, One Standard 
			Imagine two houses going up on the same shoreline. Both rise in 
			clear weather. Both look sturdy to neighbors who pass by. The sky 
			eventually darkens for both, and the same rain, flood, and wind 
			arrive. One stands. One collapses. Jesus explains the difference 
			with a single sentence: “Whoever hears these sayings of Mine and 
			does them” builds on rock (Matthew 7:24). Hearing leads somewhere. 
			It carries the hearer all the way into practical obedience. That 
			obedience follows the Lord’s pattern, without additions and without 
			subtractions. 
			The Rock Beneath Every Disciple 
			The Sermon on the Mount closes with action words: hear and do. The 
			Lord ties entrance into the kingdom to this posture of submission: 
			“He who does the will of My Father in heaven” (Matthew 7:21). 
			Scripture speaks with the same clarity: Jesus is “the author of 
			eternal salvation to all who obey Him” (Hebrews 5:9). The wise 
			builder treats every word from the Lord as load-bearing. He builds 
			by a revealed pattern, doing “whatever you do in word or deed…in the 
			name of the Lord Jesus” (Colossians 3:17), and he abides in “the 
			doctrine of Christ” (2 John 9). 
			When Tradition Poses as Law 
			The Lord confronted teachers who elevated human tradition to the 
			level of divine command. In Matthew 15 and Mark 7 He exposed that 
			exchange: their rules displaced God’s word and produced “vain” 
			worship. Tradition can assist memory and order, yet it never carries 
			authority equal to Scripture. Where men bind what God has not bound, 
			a new foundation silently replaces the old. Scripture places 
			guardrails on both sides of the road: “You shall not add to the 
			word…nor take from it” (Deuteronomy 4:2; 12:32). The apostles echo 
			the same guard: “Learn…not to go beyond what is written” (1 
			Corinthians 4:6). The Revelation closes with a final warning against 
			the same drift (Revelation 22:18–19). Additions create sand. 
			When Selective Obedience Weakens the 
			Footings 
			Subtraction changes the structure as surely as addition. Jesus asks 
			a searching question: “Why do you call Me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not 
			do the things which I say?” (Luke 6:46). The wise builder respects 
			silence where Scripture is silent and carries out the commands that 
			are spoken. The storm always reveals missing beams. James calls the 
			hearer who refuses action a self-deceiver; the doer receives 
			blessing in the doing (James 1:22–25). 
			Faith, Profession, and Practice 
			Many voices will say, “Lord, Lord,” and even point to religious 
			activity (Matthew 7:22). The verdict turns on practice: “Depart from 
			Me, you who practice lawlessness” (Matthew 7:23). Trust expresses 
			itself through submission to the Lord’s stated will (Matthew 7:21; 
			Hebrews 5:9). Confession and compliance travel together. Where the 
			Lord speaks, disciples follow. Where the Lord is silent, disciples 
			refrain. 
			How Wise Builders Work 
			Luke records a vivid detail: the wise man “dug deep and laid the 
			foundation on the rock” (Luke 6:48). That kind of work looks like 
			this: 
			
				- Receive the Lord’s words with a ready 
				mind. The wise builder sits under Scripture with eagerness 
				and humility (Matthew 7:24; Acts 17:11).
 
				- Seek understanding in context. The 
				Lord asked, “Have you understood all these things?” (Matthew 
				13:51). Understanding guards from drift.
 
				- Do exactly what He says. Obedience 
				follows the pattern God revealed, without additions and without 
				subtractions (Deuteronomy 4:2; 1 Corinthians 4:6).
 
				- Begin where the gospel begins. 
				Believe the good news, 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).
 
				- Order daily life by the Sermon on the 
				Mount. Truthful speech, reconciled relationships, purity of 
				heart, covenant faithfulness, love for enemies, quiet 
				generosity, sincere prayer, fasting without display, refusal to 
				worry, seeking the kingdom first, and the Golden Rule (Matthew 
				5–7).
 
				- Test every tradition by Scripture. 
				Keep what aligns with the teaching of Christ; discard what 
				elevates man’s will (Matthew 15:9; Colossians 2:8, 22–23).
 
				- Measure the church’s practice by the 
				apostolic pattern. Continue steadfastly in the apostles’ 
				teaching, fellowship, the breaking of bread, and prayers; 
				shepherds as Scripture describes; congregational work as 
				Scripture directs (Acts 2:42; 1 Timothy 3; Philippians 1:1).
 
			 
			The Pharisees’ Lesson for Modern Builders 
			The Pharisees believed they were honoring God. They fenced His 
			commands with layers of human rules and called those fences 
			faithfulness. Jesus called it vain worship and a setting aside of 
			God’s word (Mark 7:7–13). The lesson reaches into our century. Where 
			the church binds what God has not bound, disciples move from rock to 
			sand. Where we turn expedients into edicts, the blueprint quietly 
			changes. Where we treat Scripture as suggestions, the blueprint 
			quietly changes again—from another direction. Either move creates 
			the same result in a storm. 
			Storm Certainty and Judgment Certainty 
			Jesus does not say, if the rain falls. He says, when 
			the rain descends, the floods come, and the winds beat (Matthew 
			7:25, 27). Trials and temptations arrive in every household. The 
			final reckoning also arrives. A life arranged on the Lord’s words 
			remains standing. A life arranged on additions and subtractions 
			collapses with “great” ruin. The shoreline often looks similar in 
			clear weather. The difference appears when the waters surge. 
			A Builder’s Inventory 
			The Lord’s parable invites personal evaluation. Is my “Lord, Lord” 
			matched by doing what He says? Am I accepting His terms for entering 
			the kingdom, or am I waiting for a path that costs less? Do my 
			traditions serve the truth, or do they overshadow it? Have I removed 
			commands that strain against my preferences? Every one of those 
			questions belongs in the blueprint stage, before the next storm 
			season. 
			Choose Rock, Reject Sand 
			Jesus calls for builders who hear and do His sayings. His words 
			carry authority. Human inventions never carry that authority. 
			Excuses never carry that authority. The wise hear, understand, and 
			obey. The wise measure by what is written and stay within it. The 
			wise dig deep, set the footings on the rock, and keep building 
			there. 
			Call to Action 
			Open the Scriptures this week and read Matthew 5–7 aloud. Mark every 
			imperative from the Lord. Choose three commands that require 
			immediate attention and put them into practice without delay. If you 
			have not obeyed the gospel, submit to the Lord’s stated 
			terms—believe, repent, confess His name, and be baptized for the 
			forgiveness of sins. If additions or subtractions have governed your 
			choices, set them down and return to what is written. The next storm 
			is already on the calendar, even if the sky is clear today. 
			Exhaustive Sermon Outline 
			
				- Title/Texts
 				
					- Wise & Foolish Builders — Matthew 
					7:24–27; Luke 6:47–49
 
				 
				 
				- Opening: Two Houses, One Storm, One 
				Standard
 				
					- Shared conditions: same weather, same 
					shoreline
 
					- Single distinction: hearing that 
					becomes doing (Matthew 7:24–25)
 
				 
				 
				- The Rock Beneath Every Disciple
 				
					- Kingdom entrance tied to doing the 
					Father’s will (Matthew 7:21)
 
					- Salvation described with obedience 
					(Hebrews 5:9)
 
					- Authority principle (Colossians 3:17; 
					2 John 9)
 
				 
				 
				- When Tradition Poses as Law
 				
					- Case study: Matthew 15:1–9; Mark 
					7:1–13
 
					- Vain worship defined
 
					- Guardrails against adding (Deuteronomy 
					4:2; 12:32; 1 Corinthians 4:6; Revelation 22:18–19)
 
					- Dangers cataloged: human philosophy, 
					commandments of men, self-made religion (Colossians 2:8, 
					22–23)
 
				 
				 
				- When Selective Obedience Weakens the 
				Footings
 				
					- Luke 6:46—profession without 
					performance
 
					- James 1:22–25—self-deception vs. doing
 
					- The storm’s exposure of omissions
 
				 
				 
				- Faith, Profession, and Practice
 				
					- Matthew 7:22–23—activity vs. 
					lawfulness
 
					- Matthew 7:21; Hebrews 5:9—trust that 
					submits
 
				 
				 
				- How Wise Builders Work
 				
					- Hearing with readiness (Matthew 7:24; 
					Acts 17:11)
 
					- Understanding in context (Matthew 
					13:51)
 
					- Exact obedience, no additions or 
					subtractions (Deuteronomy 4:2; 1 Corinthians 4:6)
 
					- Gospel response: believe, repent, 
					confess, be baptized (Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 
					1 Peter 3:21)
 
					- Daily practice from the Sermon on the 
					Mount (Matthew 5–7)
 
					- Testing traditions (Matthew 15:9; 
					Colossians 2:8, 22–23)
 
					- Congregational pattern (Acts 2:42; 1 
					Timothy 3; Philippians 1:1)
 
				 
				 
				- The Pharisees’ Lesson for Modern 
				Builders
 				
					- Fences around the law turning into law
 
					- Modern parallels: elevating 
					expedients, marginalizing commands
 
					- Measuring by what is written (1 
					Corinthians 4:6)
 
				 
				 
				- Storm Certainty and Judgment Certainty
 				
					- Life’s trials
 
					- Final reckoning (implied by Matthew 
					7:21–23)
 
					- Results: standing or great fall
 
				 
				 
				- A Builder’s Inventory
 				
					- Questions for self-examination
 
					- Family, worship, personal holiness, 
					congregational practice
 
				 
				 
				- Call to Action
 				
					- Read and mark Matthew 5–7
 
					- Obey the gospel
 
					- Realign practice with Scripture alone
 
				 
				 
				- Conclusion: Choose Rock, Reject Sand
 				
					- Authority resides in the Lord’s 
					sayings
 
					- Builders decide where to set the 
					footings
 
				 
				 
			 
			Scripture Reference List (with brief notes) 
			
				- Matthew 7:24–27 — Two builders; 
				hearing becomes doing; rock vs. sand.
 
				- Luke 6:47–49 — “Dug deep”; 
				foundation imagery; same storm, different outcome.
 
				- Matthew 7:21 — Entrance tied to 
				doing the Father’s will.
 
				- Matthew 7:22–23 — Religious claims 
				evaluated by practice; lawlessness condemned.
 
				- Hebrews 5:9 — Salvation described 
				in terms of obedience to Christ.
 
				- Colossians 3:17 — Word and deed 
				regulated by the authority of Jesus.
 
				- 2 John 9 — Abiding in the doctrine 
				of Christ identifies true fellowship.
 
				- Matthew 15:1–9; Mark 7:1–13 — 
				Traditions that set aside the commandment of God; vain worship.
 
				- Deuteronomy 4:2; 12:32 — No adding 
				or taking away from God’s word.
 
				- 1 Corinthians 4:6 — Do not go 
				beyond what is written.
 
				- Revelation 22:18–19 — Warning 
				against adding to or taking from the revealed word.
 
				- Colossians 2:8, 22–23 — Human 
				philosophy, commandments of men, and self-made religion lack 
				value.
 
				- James 1:22–25 — Doers blessed in 
				the doing; hearers only deceive themselves.
 
				- Acts 17:11 — Noble-minded hearing 
				and daily examination of Scripture.
 
				- Matthew 13:51 — Understanding the 
				Lord’s teaching.
 
				- Mark 16:16 — Belief and baptism 
				joined in the Lord’s commission.
 
				- Acts 22:16 — Baptism to wash away 
				sins, calling on His name.
 
				- Romans 6:3–4 — Baptism into 
				Christ’s death; raised to walk in newness of life.
 
				- 1 Peter 3:21 — Baptism saves 
				through an appeal to God for a good conscience.
 
				- Acts 2:42 — Apostolic pattern for 
				congregational life.
 
				- 1 Timothy 3; Philippians 1:1 — 
				Organization of the local church: overseers and deacons.
 
			 
			Prepared by David Hersey of the church of 
			Christ at Granby, MO 
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