The Parable of the Strong
Man’s House
Text: Matthew 12:29; Mark 3:27; Luke 11:21–22
Opening: A House, a Guard, and a Greater Power
Jesus sketches a scene everyone can picture. A well-armed strong man
guards his house and keeps his goods secure. Then a stronger man
arrives, overpowers the guard, ties him up, and carries off what he
once held. With a few strokes, the Lord tells us what His ministry
means. Satan claimed people as property. Jesus entered the house,
subdued the guard, and began a rescue.
The Setting: Contest Over
Authority
This picture comes in a moment of accusation. Jesus healed and
expelled demons; critics claimed He drew power from darkness. The
Lord answered with simple logic. A divided kingdom collapses. A
house at war with itself cannot stand. His works revealed a
different reality: the reign of God was pushing back the reign of
the adversary (Matthew 12:25–28; Mark 3:23–26; Luke 11:17–20).
The Picture Explained
The strong man represents the devil. The house pictures his domain.
The goods represent those he holds in bondage. The stronger man is
the Lord. He enters, restrains, and plunders. That is rescue
language. The Gospels show it in real time as Jesus heals, teaches
truth, forgives, and frees. The wider New Testament announces what
those signs pointed toward: the cross disarmed rulers and
authorities (Colossians 2:15); the death of Jesus broke the one who
held the power of death and freed those enslaved by fear (Hebrews
2:14–15); the Son of God appeared to destroy the works of the devil
(1 John 3:8).
What This Declares About the
Kingdom
This parable stands as a banner: the King has acted and His reign is
at work. People once trapped in darkness receive transfer into a new
realm (Colossians 1:13). Eyes once veiled open to light (Acts
26:18). The mission of Jesus is not a private improvement program.
He recovers captives and forms them into a people who hear His voice
and follow His commands.
Only One Allegiance
Jesus adds a clear line: “He who is not with Me is against Me; and
he who does not gather with Me scatters” (Matthew 12:30). Neutrality
evaporates in the presence of this King. Allegiance shows in
gathering with Him. Allegiance shows in aligning life with His word.
How the Stronger Man
Continues to Plunder
The Lord plunders through the gospel preached. Minds darkened by the
god of this age encounter the light of Christ (2 Corinthians 4:4–6).
Servants teach with patience so that opponents may come to their
senses and escape the snare of the devil (2 Timothy 2:25–26).
Congregations hold forth the word of life. Every conversion, every
act of repentance, every restored home, every rescued soul—these are
spoils carried from a house once guarded by a strong man.
The Enemy’s Reality and
Limits
Scripture speaks plainly about an adversary who prowls (1 Peter
5:8). He tempts, lies, accuses, and seeks footholds (Ephesians
4:27). He is real, yet limited. He is strong, yet surpassed. The
Lord’s victory fixes the horizon. Resistance has a promise attached
to it: “Resist the devil and he will flee from you” (James 4:7).
Guarding Your House
Luke adds an important detail: the stronger man “takes from him all
his armor in which he trusted” (Luke 11:22). Disciples live in that
confidence and they also keep watch. The armor of God equips
believers for steady resistance—truth, righteousness, readiness,
trust, salvation, Scripture, and prayerful alertness (Ephesians
6:10–18). Households guard hearts and habits. Churches guard
teaching and life. A closed door to footholds preserves joy.
Words, Fruit, and
Accountability
Matthew places this image alongside sober words about trees and
fruit and about careless speech (Matthew 12:33–37). The Lord’s
rescue produces a new kind of harvest. Hearts changed by His
teaching yield good words and good deeds. Idle talk and empty
religion fit the old house. Reverent speech and obedient practice
fit the new one.
What This Means for Our Work
The field is crowded and the labor is clear. Carry the gospel to
neighbors and nations. Stand beside those who fight long battles
with temptation. Teach patiently, answer gently, correct faithfully,
and pray earnestly. Every act of faithful witness participates in
the Lord’s raid on the strong man’s house.
Conclusion: Stand With the
Stronger One
The picture could not be plainer. A guard once felt invincible. A
stronger One entered and tied him up. Choose your side. The Lord
calls for builders who gather, servants who stand firm, and heralds
who speak with clarity. Take your place in His rescue.
Exhaustive Sermon Outline
- Text
- Matthew 12:29; Mark
3:27; Luke 11:21–22
- Aim
- Announce Christ’s
superior power over Satan and call disciples to active
allegiance, vigilant holiness, and evangelistic courage.
- Context and Flow
- Accusation of demonic
power (Matthew 12:24; Mark 3:22; Luke 11:15)
- Logical reply: divided
houses fall (Matthew 12:25–26)
- Kingdom arrival
signaled by expulsions (Matthew 12:28; Luke 11:20)
- Parable of the strong
man’s house (Matthew 12:29; Mark 3:27; Luke 11:21–22)
- Allegiance line drawn
(Matthew 12:30)
- Fruit and words
accountability (Matthew 12:33–37)
- Elements of the Picture
- Strong man = the devil
(Luke 11:21)
- House and goods =
people under his sway
- Stronger man = the Lord
(Luke 11:22)
- Binding and plundering
= rescue
- Theological Bearings
- Purpose of the Son’s
coming (1 John 3:8)
- Triumph at the cross
(Colossians 2:15; Hebrews 2:14–15)
- Transfer into the
kingdom (Colossians 1:13)
- Opening eyes and
turning hearts (Acts 26:18)
- Allegiance and Mission
- With Christ or against
Him; gathering or scattering (Matthew 12:30)
- Gospel light against
blindness (2 Corinthians 4:4–6)
- Patient teaching that
frees captives (2 Timothy 2:25–26)
- Practical Warfare
- Resist and the devil
flees (James 4:7)
- Vigilance and sobriety
(1 Peter 5:8–9)
- Armor of God for daily
conflict (Ephesians 6:10–18)
- Refuse footholds
(Ephesians 4:27)
- Fruit and Speech
- Trees known by fruit
(Matthew 12:33)
- Words reveal hearts;
give account (Matthew 12:34–37)
- Congregational
Applications
- Hold fast to sound
doctrine and teach it publicly and privately
- Pray for boldness and
clarity in evangelism
- Support those emerging
from bondage with patience and accountability
- Guard homes through
Scripture, wise boundaries, and steady worship
- Decisions Before Us
- Allegiance to Christ’s
rule
- Repentance where
footholds exist
- Commitment to the work
of gathering with Him
Call to Action
Align with the Stronger One today. If you need to begin in obedient
faith, respond to the gospel—believe, repent, confess Christ, and be
baptized into Him (Mark 16:16; Romans 10:9–10; Acts 22:16). If you
belong to Him and see footholds, renounce them, seek help, and put
on the whole armor of God. Choose one person this week and share the
Lord’s rescue with them.
Scripture Reference List
- Parable Texts
— Matthew 12:29; Mark 3:27; Luke 11:21–22
- Context
— Matthew 12:25–28, 30, 33–37; Mark 3:23–26; Luke 11:17–20
- Christ’s Triumph and
Purpose — Colossians 2:15; Hebrews
2:14–15; 1 John 3:8
- Kingdom Transfer and
Illumination — Colossians 1:13; Acts
26:18; 2 Corinthians 4:4–6
- Allegiance and Mission
— Matthew 12:30; 2 Timothy 2:25–26
- Warfare and Watchfulness
— James 4:7; 1 Peter 5:8–9; Ephesians 4:27; Ephesians 6:10–18
- Response to the Gospel
— Mark 16:16; Romans 10:9–10; Acts 22:16
Prepared by David Hersey of the
church of Christ at Granby, MO
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