Blind Leading the Blind
Text: Luke 6:39; cf. Matthew 15:14
Opening: When the Guide Cannot See
Jesus set a short sentence in front of His
disciples: “Can the blind lead the blind?
Will they not both fall into the ditch?”
(Luke 6:39). A guide without sight cannot
keep his own footing, much less protect
those who follow. This warning belongs in
every generation because teachers shape
souls, and followers share outcomes. The
Lord calls for leaders whose sight comes
from Scripture and for hearers who test
every voice by the same light.
The
Saying in Context
Luke places the proverb in the training of
disciples. Jesus forms character, exposes
hypocrisy, and teaches discernment. Matthew
records the same reality when the Lord
identifies Pharisees as “blind guides” after
they elevated tradition over God’s command
(Matthew 15:1–14). Their customs canceled
the fifth commandment; their worship drifted
into vanity (Matthew 15:6–9). Jesus told His
disciples: “Let them alone,” because a
sightless guide pulls a whole line into the
pit (Matthew 15:14).
What Blindness Looks Like
Blindness in a teacher shows up in
predictable ways. It appears when human
tradition replaces God’s command (Matthew
15:6–9). It appears when confidence rests on
status, numbers, or charisma instead of
sound teaching (Colossians 2:8; 2 Timothy
4:3–4). It appears when moral rigor aims
outward while the heart stays unexamined
(Matthew 23:16–24). It appears when the
message outruns the text and words go beyond
what is written (1 Corinthians 4:6). A
teacher may wear the language of devotion
and still lack sight if the lamp of God’s
word does not set the path (Psalm 119:105).
Why People Follow Blind Guides
People attach themselves to leaders who
promise ease, confirm prejudice, or flatter
the audience (Romans 16:17–18). Some chase
novelty. Some prefer the comfort of
tradition without testing it. Some avoid the
effort of searching the Scriptures. Yet
discernment remains a personal duty. The
Bereans show the pattern: receive the word
with readiness and examine the Scriptures
daily to see whether things are so (Acts
17:11).
The Cost of Blind Guidance
Jesus did not present an inconvenience; He
described a fall. A ditch swallows families,
congregations, and entire communities when
teachers and hearers drift from God’s word
(Hosea 4:6). When leaders lack sight,
discipline fails, doctrine frays, and
holiness erodes. The ledger fills with
avoidable harms: divided churches, hardened
hearts, and souls unprepared for judgment
(Matthew 7:22–27).
Tests for Sighted Guides
The Lord hands His people reliable tests.
First, the fruit test: good trees bear good
fruit; a teacher’s life and outcomes must
reveal integrity, purity, and peace (Matthew
7:15–20). Second, the word test: teaching
must fit the whole counsel of God, neither
adding to nor taking away from what He has
revealed (Deuteronomy 4:2; Acts 20:27;
Revelation 22:18–19). Third, the humility
test: a faithful teacher submits to
Scripture, welcomes correction, and refuses
flattery (James 3:1; Isaiah 66:2). Fourth,
the accountability test: shepherds watch for
souls and will give account; followers
imitate their faith only as they speak the
word of God (Hebrews 13:7, 17).
Your Responsibility as a Hearer—and as a
Teacher
Every Christian carries responsibility in
this parable. Hear the Lord’s words, measure
every message by Scripture, and hold fast to
what proves true (1 Thessalonians 5:21).
Refuse voices that lead away from plain
commands (Romans 16:17). If you teach, speak
where the Bible speaks and keep silence
where it is silent (1 Corinthians 4:6).
Traditions may serve as tools; they never
rise to the rank of law (Matthew 15:9). When
a practice cannot show its warrant from the
Lord, retire it. When a command stands in
the text, arrange your steps beneath it.
Recovering Sight
If you find that you have followed a blind
guide, turn. Return to the Scriptures. Seek
out elders and teachers who open the text
and stay within it (Nehemiah 8:8; 2 Timothy
2:15; 3:16–17). Where harm was done, make
restitution and set a better course (Luke
19:8–9). Confidence grows again when the
lamp is relit and placed where it belongs.
A
Church That Sees
A congregation gains clarity when its
leaders love truth and its people read their
Bibles. Prayers turn specific. Teaching
gains depth. Corrections come with patience
and proof. Evangelism carries Scripture to
the doorstep. Decisions move at the pace of
understanding, not the pressure of novelty.
Unity grows around conviction formed by
God’s word (Philippians 1:9–11).
Conclusion: Choose Sight, Avoid the Ditch
Two lines move through the world: one behind
teachers who see by the word, one behind
teachers who move in darkness. The Lord’s
proverb stands: both lines reach the guide’s
destination. Attach your steps to the light.
Seek leaders who open the Scriptures. Become
a person others can safely follow because
your eyes stay fixed on what God has said.
Exhaustive Sermon Outline
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Text and Aim
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Luke 6:39; Matthew 15:14 — A proverb that warns hearers and teachers; outcomes match guidance.
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Context
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Luke 6: disciple formation and discernment.
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Matthew 15: traditions elevated over command; worship becomes vain.
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Marks of Blindness
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Tradition displacing command (Matthew 15:6–9).
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Philosophy and empty deceit (Colossians 2:8).
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Itching ears and audience-driven messages (2 Timothy 4:3–4).
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Moral show without heart obedience (Matthew 23:16–24).
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Teaching beyond what is written (1 Corinthians 4:6).
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Why People Follow
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Flattery and smooth talk (Romans 16:17–18).
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Love of novelty or comfort; neglect of Scripture (Acts 17:11).
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Consequences
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Both fall into the ditch; homes and churches suffer (Hosea 4:6; Matthew 7:26–27).
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Tests for Sighted Guides
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Fruit (Matthew 7:15–20).
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Submission to Scripture; no additions or subtractions (Deuteronomy 4:2; Revelation 22:18–19).
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Humility, accountability (James 3:1; Hebrews 13:7, 17).
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Duties for Hearers and Teachers
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Prove all things; hold fast to good (1 Thessalonians 5:21).
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Avoid divisive error (Romans 16:17).
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Handle the word accurately (2 Timothy 2:15; 3:16–17).
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Speak where Scripture speaks; be silent where it is silent (1 Corinthians 4:6).
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Recovery Steps
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Repent, return to the text, seek faithful shepherds, repair harms (Luke 19:8–9).
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Appeal
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Choose sighted leadership; become sighted yourself by daily Scripture.
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Call to Action
Test the teaching you hear this week. Open
your Bible and trace each claim to chapter
and verse. Schedule time with an elder or
teacher who will study with you. Retire one
practice that lacks Scriptural footing.
Commit to daily reading so your steps follow
the light.
Scripture Reference List (with brief notes)
Luke 6:39 — Core proverb: blind
guides lead to shared ruin.
Matthew 15:1–14 — Tradition
elevated; worship becomes vain; “blind
guides.”
Matthew 23:16–24 — “Blind guides”
exposed; emphasis on heart obedience.
Matthew 7:15–20 — Fruit test for
teachers.
1
Corinthians 4:6 — Stay within what
is written.
Deuteronomy 4:2; Revelation 22:18–19
— No additions or subtractions to God’s
word.
Colossians 2:8 — Beware of
philosophy and empty deceit.
2
Timothy 4:3–4 — Itching ears gather
teachers to taste.
Romans 16:17–18 — Mark and avoid
divisive error; smooth talk deceives.
Acts 17:11 — Bereans: eager hearing
and daily examination.
2
Timothy 2:15; 3:16–17 — Handle the
word accurately; Scripture equips for every
good work.
Hebrews 13:7, 17 — Remember leaders
who speak the word; obey and be led for your
soul’s good.
Hosea 4:6 — Destruction follows
lack of knowledge.
Psalm 119:105 — God’s word as lamp
and light.
Luke 19:8–9 — Restitution as a mark
of true course correction.
Prepared by David Hersey of the church of Christ at Granby, MO