The Parable of the Speck and
Log
Text: Matthew 7:3–5; Luke
6:41–42
Opening: The Carpenter’s Picture
Jesus closes in on our habits with a vivid image. A man peers hard
at a brother’s speck while a beam juts from his own eye. Everyone in
the shop can see the problem except the man holding the timber on
his face. The Lord’s point is plain: self-examination must precede
correction. When we start with ourselves, we gain clear sight to
help a brother. When we skip that step, we slip into hypocrisy and
harm the very person we hoped to help.
The Setting: Judgment, Measure, and Sight
Matthew places this teaching inside the Sermon on the Mount. “Judge
not, that you be not judged” heads the section, followed by the rule
of measure: “with what measure you use, it will be measured back to
you” (Matthew 7:1–2). Luke pairs the same image with the call to
merciful judgment and generous measure (Luke 6:37–38, 41–42). Jesus
shapes a people who discern carefully, speak carefully, and approach
a brother with the humility that comes from honest self-scrutiny.
What the Lord Requires
The Lord gives an order of operations. First, notice your own plank.
Second, remove it. Third, “then you will see clearly to remove the
speck from your brother’s eye” (Matthew 7:5). The goal is never
indifference; the goal is restoration with steady hands and accurate
vision. “Judge with righteous judgment” sets the standard (John
7:24). The church family restores the one who is overtaken in fault
“in a spirit of gentleness,” keeping watch on themselves (Galatians
6:1). The image of an eye reminds us how delicate this work is. A
careless hand scratches. A steady hand heals.
Why Hypocrisy Ruins the Work
Hypocrisy multiplies harm. It blinds the would-be helper (Matthew
7:3–4). It invites the same harsh measure from God and from others
(Matthew 7:2). It trains a congregation to hide sin rather than
confess it, because people fear the person who never looks in a
mirror. Scripture exposes this danger: those who condemn others
while doing the same things condemn themselves (Romans 2:1). Pride
drives the beam deeper. Humility draws it out.
Seeing the Speck for What It Is
Jesus still calls a speck a speck. Sin, even small in appearance,
irritates, blurs vision, and can worsen if ignored. Love addresses
it. Leviticus 19:17 pairs love with frank rebuke; James 5:19–20
celebrates the rescue of a straying soul. Healthy churches practice
both careful self-examination and courageous correction. They avoid
harshness, yet they also avoid silence that abandons a brother to
injury.
How Wise Disciples Remove Their Own Planks
Begin with prayer: “Search me, O God… see if there is any wicked way
in me” (Psalm 139:23–24). Review the Lord’s standard, not your own
preference (Colossians 3:17). Invite honest feedback from mature
believers (Proverbs 27:6). Repent where Scripture convicts; keep
short accounts. Remember the rule of measure and let mercy season
your words (Matthew 7:2; Colossians 4:6). When the beam is out,
clarity and compassion rise together.
How to Help a Brother with a Speck
Confirm facts before speaking (Proverbs 18:13, 17). Go privately
first and aim for gain, not victory (Matthew 18:15). Choose words
that fit the need, not the heat of the moment (Ephesians 4:29). Keep
the purpose in view: to remove what harms sight, to restore
usefulness and joy. Where stubborn refusal remains, the Lord
provides orderly steps for discipline that protect the flock and
honor His name (Matthew 18:16–17; 1 Corinthians 5:1–8). Even then,
the hope of repentance remains open.
Guardrails for Discernment
Some matters are clear commands; others are disputable (Romans
14:1–13). Treat clear sin as Scripture treats it. Treat scruples and
opinions with patience. Refuse to elevate tradition to the level of
law (Matthew 15:9; 1 Corinthians 4:6). Refuse to shrug at sin that
Scripture plainly names (Ephesians 5:11). The Lord’s word furnishes
wisdom for every category; let that word set the categories.
What Communities Look Like When This Lives
Homes and congregations grow gentler and stronger. Confession
becomes normal because people know they will be helped rather than
shamed. Teaching gains credibility because teachers examine
themselves first (1 Timothy 4:16). Peace grows because quarrels lose
their fuel when pride loses its perch (Philippians 2:3–4). The world
sees a people who tell the truth in love, and the Lord’s name is
honored.
Conclusion: Pick Up the Mirror, Then Offer Your Hand
Jesus hands every disciple a mirror and a towel. Look deeply. Remove
what blocks your own sight. Then reach for your brother’s good. The
same Savior who exposed hypocrisy also formed a family that
restores. Follow His order, speak with His wisdom, and handle eyes
with care.
Exhaustive Sermon Outline
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Text
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Matthew 7:3–5; Luke 6:41–42
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Aim
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Form disciples who practice self-examination before
correction and who restore with clarity and gentleness.
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Context
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Judgment and measure (Matthew 7:1–2; Luke 6:37–38).
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Sight and guidance linked to humility (Luke 6:39–42).
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Order of Operations
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Notice your plank (Matthew 7:3–4).
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Remove it (Psalm 139:23–24; Romans 2:1).
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Then help your brother (Matthew 7:5; Galatians 6:1).
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Dangers of Hypocrisy
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Self-blindness; harsh measures returned (Matthew 7:2–4).
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Loss of credibility and increased harm (Romans 2:1).
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Righteous Judgment Defined
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Judge with right standards (John 7:24).
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Speak truth in love; aim for restoration (Ephesians 4:15,
29; Leviticus 19:17; James 5:19–20).
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Practices for Removing Planks
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Prayerful self-examination (Psalm 139:23–24).
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Submission to Scripture (Colossians 3:17; 1 Corinthians
4:6).
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Accountability and repentance (Proverbs 27:6; 1 John 1:9).
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Practices for Removing Specks
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Verify, go privately, seek gain (Proverbs 18:13; Matthew
18:15).
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If needed, follow church discipline steps (Matthew 18:16–17;
1 Corinthians 5:1–8).
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Maintain gentleness (Galatians 6:1).
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Discernment in Disputable Matters
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Romans 14:1–13; avoid binding opinions; avoid excusing sin.
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Outcome When Obeyed
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Credible teaching (1 Timothy 4:16).
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Peace and unity (Philippians 2:3–4).
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Honor to God’s name (Matthew 5:16).
Call to Action
This week, ask God to reveal one plank that needs removal. Act on
what He shows—repent, repair, and realign. Then schedule a private,
gentle conversation to help a brother or sister with one speck,
using Matthew 18:15 as your pattern. Let mercy guide your measure.
Scripture Reference List
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Matthew 7:1–5 — Measure
and sequence: self-examination leads to clear help.
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Luke 6:37–42 — Mercy,
measure, and the eye image; training in discernment.
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John 7:24 — Righteous
judgment by right standards.
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Romans 2:1 — Hypocrisy
condemns the hypocrite.
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Galatians 6:1 — Restore
gently; watch yourself.
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Leviticus 19:17 — Love
includes frank rebuke.
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James 5:19–20 — Turning
a sinner back saves a soul.
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Psalm 139:23–24 —
Prayer for searching and correction.
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Proverbs 18:13, 17 —
Hear fully before answering; test both sides.
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Ephesians 4:15, 29 —
Speak truth in love; build up with words.
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Matthew 18:15–17 —
Steps for correction and discipline.
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1 Corinthians 5:1–8 —
Discipline that aims at purity.
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Romans 14:1–13 — Handle
disputable matters with patience.
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Colossians 3:17 — Do
all in the name of the Lord.
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1 Corinthians 4:6 —
Stay within what is written.
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1 Timothy 4:16 — Watch
life and teaching; save yourself and hearers.
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Philippians 2:3–4 —
Humility that considers others.
Prepared
by David Hersey of the church of Christ at Granby, MO
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