Parable of the Tower Builder
Luke 14:28–30
Opening:
Blueprints Before Bricks
Jesus paints a simple scene:
a man plans a tower. He sits
down, calculates the cost,
and decides whether he can
finish. If he lays a
foundation and stops,
neighbors point at the stump
of a project and shake their
heads. The Lord ties this
picture to discipleship.
Following Him calls for a
thoughtful beginning and a
faithful finish. He urges
hearers to count every cost
before they lift the first
stone, because His way
involves cross-bearing and a
lifetime of steady building
(Luke 14:25–27, 33).
The Setting:
Large Crowds and a Serious
Call
Luke places this parable on
a day when “great
multitudes” walked with
Jesus (Luke 14:25). Large
crowds often include many
motives. Jesus turns and
speaks plainly about loyalty
that places Him before every
relationship, every
possession, and every plan
(Luke 14:26–27, 33). He then
gives two pictures—the tower
builder and the king
considering war—to press one
lesson: weigh the demands of
the Lord, then commit with
eyes open.
What the
Parable Teaches
The builder sits down. He
adds up resources, measures
the structure, and counts
the steps from foundation to
roofline (Luke 14:28). He
refuses to confuse starting
with finishing. He knows
public shame follows
half-built monuments (Luke
14:29–30). This story moves
disciples to decide with
clarity. The Lord welcomes
willing hearts that
understand His terms. He
expects endurance that
brings a house to completion
(Luke 9:23; Matthew
10:38–39).
Why Counting
Matters
Discipleship touches every
ledger: time, affections,
habits, ambitions, and
possessions. Unplanned zeal
often collapses under
weather and weight, while
examined commitments hold
firm when winds rise.
Scripture honors careful
planning joined to faithful
action (Proverbs 21:5;
Proverbs 24:27). Vows carry
weight; the wise keep their
word (Ecclesiastes 5:4–5).
The Lord links entrance into
His kingdom with doing the
Father’s will (Matthew 7:21)
and calls Himself the author
of eternal salvation to all
who obey (Hebrews 5:9).
Those passages describe the
rock under a finished tower.
Marks of an
Unfinished Tower
An unfinished tower often
shows a pattern. There was a
quick start without sober
thought. There was a strong
emotion without steady
discipline. There was a
public pledge without
private practice. There was
a desire to hold Christ in
one hand and unyielded
habits in the other. The
foundation shows, but the
frame never rises. Jesus
warns against that path
because ridicule follows
failed commitments and souls
suffer when promises drift.
How to Count
Costs Today
Sit down with the Lord’s
words open and take
inventory. Identify every
claim Jesus makes on your
life. He calls for daily
cross-bearing (Luke 9:23),
priority above family and
self (Luke 14:26–27), and
surrender of possessions
(Luke 14:33). Consider the
appointed response to the
gospel: believe, repent,
confess, and be baptized for
the remission of sins (Mark
16:16; Acts 22:16; Romans
6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21). Review
the pattern for ongoing
life: truthful speech,
reconciled relationships,
purity of heart, integrity
in commitments, generous
service, sincere prayer,
wise stewardship, and trust
in God’s care (Matthew 5–7;
Colossians 3:17). List
likely pressures—work
demands, friendships,
screens, recreation,
finances—and write down how
you will honor the Lord in
each place. Counting costs
turns vague desire into
tested plans.
A Finisher’s
Mindset
The New Testament showcases
builders who reach the last
board. Paul could say, “I
have finished the race” (2
Timothy 4:7). He arranged
his days to match his aim (1
Corinthians 9:24–27). He
considered his life of no
value to himself so he could
complete the ministry
received (Acts 20:24). The
finish line belongs to those
who add diligence to faith,
keep growing in character,
and make calling and
election sure, “for so an
entrance will be
supplied…into the
everlasting kingdom” (2
Peter 1:5–11). These
passages describe habits
that carry a tower from
plans to roof.
Congregational Blueprints
Churches build together.
Teaching programs,
benevolence efforts,
evangelism, missionary
support, buildings, and
budgets demand counting.
Leaders and members sit
down, measure resources,
confirm authority from
Scripture for each work, and
commit to complete what they
begin (Colossians 3:17; 1
Corinthians 4:6). Quiet
follow-through honors God
and strengthens credibility
in the community. Partial
projects weaken confidence;
completed work points people
to the Lord.
Finishing
Requires the Lord’s Pattern
The Lord’s words are
load-bearing. He calls
disciples to listen,
understand, and do exactly
what He says, adding nothing
and removing nothing
(Deuteronomy 4:2; 1
Corinthians 4:6; Matthew
28:20). Human traditions and
personal shortcuts always
bend the frame. A wise
builder keeps his eye on the
blueprint and refuses to
substitute different
materials or measurements.
The result is stability when
storms beat upon the house
(Luke 6:47–49).
Invitation
The Lord invites thoughtful
commitment. He asks for
hearts that hear His words
and practice them. He joins
salvation to obedience
(Matthew 7:21; Hebrews 5:9).
Come believing, turn from
sin, confess Christ, and be
baptized to wash away sins
(Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16;
Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21).
Then keep building until the
last course is set.
Exhaustive Sermon Outline
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Text and Context
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Read Luke 14:28–30; note the larger call in 14:25–27, 31–33
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Purpose: urge hearers to count costs and commit to finishing
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Key Movements in the Parable
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“Sits down” — deliberate reflection
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“Counts the cost” — resources, time, endurance
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“Lays a foundation” — public beginning
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“Able to finish?” — goal fixed from day one
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Shame of half-built towers — public consequence
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Scriptural Foundations for Counting
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Proverbs 21:5; 24:27 — planning with action
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Ecclesiastes 5:4–5 — weight of vows
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Luke 9:23 — daily cross-bearing
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Matthew 10:37–39; Luke 14:26–27, 33 — supreme loyalty
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Matthew 7:21; Hebrews 5:9 — obedience tied to salvation
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Marks of Unfinished Towers
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Unexamined motives; impulsive starts
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Conflicted loyalties; crowded calendars
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Silence where practice should be; promises without steps
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Counting Costs in Conversion
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Believe, repent, confess, be baptized (Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21)
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Understand the lifelong nature of the commitment (Luke 9:23)
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Counting Costs in Daily Practice
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Sermon on the Mount as the building code (Matthew 5–7)
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Do all by Christ’s authority (Colossians 3:17)
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Guard the pattern, neither adding nor taking away (Deuteronomy 4:2; 1 Corinthians 4:6)
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A Finisher’s Habits
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Fixed aim and self-control (1 Corinthians 9:24–27)
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Valuing the task above comfort (Acts 20:24)
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Steady growth that results in a full entrance (2 Peter 1:5–11)
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End-of-life testimony: “finished the race” (2 Timothy 4:7)
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Congregational Applications
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Plan works the church is authorized to do (Colossians 3:17)
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Count resources; commit timelines; finish what is started
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Encourage members toward durable service
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Appeal
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Begin with eyes open; continue with firm purpose; finish with joy
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Call to
Action
Sit down this week with Luke
14 open.
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Write three costs you must accept to follow Jesus more fully.
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Write three steps you will take to complete a neglected spiritual task.
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Share your plan with a mature Christian and set check-ins for 30, 60, and 90 days. Start today.
Scripture Reference List (with notes)
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Luke 14:25–33 — Context of discipleship, tower builder, king at war, and renouncing all
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Luke 14:28–30 — The parable’s core: sit, count, finish
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Luke 9:23 — Daily cross-bearing defines the path
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Matthew 10:37–39 — Loyalty to Christ above all
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Matthew 7:21 — Doing the Father’s will and entrance into the kingdom
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Hebrews 5:9 — Salvation connected to obedience
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Proverbs 21:5; 24:27 — Planning joined to diligent work
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Ecclesiastes 5:4–5 — Keep vows; do not delay to pay what you have vowed
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1 Corinthians 9:24–27 — Discipline and aim in the race
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Acts 20:24 — Finishing the ministry received
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2 Peter 1:5–11 — Growth that leads to an abundant entrance
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2 Timothy 4:7 — Testimony of a completed race
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Colossians 3:17 — Do all in the name of the Lord
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Deuteronomy 4:2; 1 Corinthians 4:6 — Guard the pattern without additions or omissions
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Mark 16:16; Acts 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21 — Appointed response to the gospel
Prepared by David Hersey of the church of Christ at Granby, MO