Parable or the Warring King
Luke 14:31–32
Opening: Two Kings, One Decision, One Deadline
Jesus sets a battlefield before our eyes. A ruler surveys the
horizon and sees a stronger army approaching. He sits down,
considers his strength, and decides his next move. If he cannot win,
he sends a delegation and asks for terms of peace while the enemy is
still far away (Luke 14:31–32). The Lord presses this image into
every heart that hears Him. Discipleship calls for sober calculation
and timely surrender. Life presents real conflict, real consequence,
and a closing window to make the right request.
The Setting: Crowds
Listening, Demands Clarified
Luke places this parable beside the tower builder. Large crowds were
following Jesus, and He clarified the cost of allegiance—loyalty
above every relationship, cross-bearing, and a life placed at His
disposal (Luke 14:25–27, 33). The tower urges careful planning; the
warring king urges timely submission. Together they form one call:
count carefully and commit fully.
The Picture Explained: Power,
Prudence, Peace
A king with ten thousand weighs his chances against twenty thousand.
He does not charge blindly. He sits, calculates, and acts according
to truth. If the numbers condemn his hopes, he pursues peace
immediately. Jesus places us in that seat. Every listener measures
personal strength against the certainty of accountability. The wise
request peace before the first arrow flies.
Why This Matters: The Stakes
of Resistance
Human strength cannot overturn the Lord’s rule or avoid His judgment
(Psalm 2:1–12; Acts 17:30–31). Delay does not reduce the advance of
that day. The Lord connects entrance into His kingdom with doing the
Father’s will (Matthew 7:21) and identifies Himself as the author of
eternal salvation to all who obey (Hebrews 5:9). The parable warns
against casual delay and invites decisive obedience.
Seeking Peace on the Lord’s
Terms
The lesser king does not dictate. He seeks terms. In the same way,
people who desire reconciliation do not negotiate new conditions for
discipleship; they receive the Lord’s conditions and comply.
Scripture presents a clear response to the gospel: hear and believe
the good news (Romans 10:17; Mark 16:16), repent of sins (Acts
17:30), confess Jesus as Lord (Romans 10:9–10), and be baptized to
wash away sins, rising to walk in newness of life (Acts 22:16;
Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21). Thereafter, live each day under His
authority in all you say and do (Colossians 3:17), learning His
commands and practicing them.
Obedience and Ongoing
Allegiance
The warring king does not ask for a truce that lasts an afternoon.
He seeks enduring peace under a greater banner. Discipleship follows
the same pattern. Jesus calls for daily cross-bearing (Luke 9:23),
integrity of heart, truthfulness, purity, steadfast love, quiet
generosity, sincere prayer, and trust in the Father’s care (Matthew
5–7). This way of life answers His words with action. It preserves
the pattern He delivered, neither adding human innovations nor
removing divine requirements (Deuteronomy 4:2; 1 Corinthians 4:6).
The result is stability when trials rise and credibility when the
watching world weighs our claims.
What Miscalculation Looks
Like
Some delay the decision and hope the marching army will turn aside.
Some assume past religion guarantees future safety while daily
choices run contrary to the Lord’s teaching. Some invent personal
conditions and call them faith. The Lord’s warning stands: “Why do
you call Me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do the things which I say?”
(Luke 6:46). Words without obedience leave a soul unprepared.
Activity without submission leaves a soul unchanged. The storm and
the judgment expose every false estimate (Matthew 7:22–27).
Urgency: “While He Is Still
Far Off”
Jesus emphasizes timing. The wise king sends his envoys while the
opposing force remains distant. This is mercy in motion. Scripture
urges the same discernment: “Now is the day of salvation” (2
Corinthians 6:2). Seek the Lord while He may be found (Isaiah 55:6).
The door of opportunity stands open today. Use it.
Congregational Implications
Churches also choose between presumption and prudence. Congregations
thrive when they plan their work by Scripture, keep authorized
priorities, and move promptly to reconcile with God and with each
other (Colossians 3:17; Matthew 5:23–24). Teaching, benevolence,
evangelism, and mutual edification all proceed under the Lord’s
terms. Delay in peacemaking breeds bitterness; swift submission
protects unity.
Conclusion: Send the
Delegation Today
The King of kings approaches. His authority does not waver and His
word does not fail. He welcomes those who come on His terms. Hear
Him. Believe Him. Turn from sin. Confess His name. Be baptized into
Christ. Rise to a life arranged under His command (Mark 16:16; Acts
22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21; Matthew 28:20). Then continue in
obedient allegiance, assured that His terms bring true peace.
Exhaustive Sermon Outline
- Text and Context
- Read Luke 14:31–32;
note surrounding demands (Luke 14:25–27, 33)
- Twin parables: tower
builder and warring king—planning and surrender
- Elements of the Picture
- A superior force
approaches
- A ruler sits down and
calculates
- A timely request for
peace goes out “while… far off”
- Prudence replaces
pride; obedience replaces impulse
- Doctrinal Anchors
- Lordship and obedience:
Matthew 7:21; Hebrews 5:9
- Universality and
certainty of judgment: Acts 17:30–31
- The appointed response:
Mark 16:16; Acts 17:30; Romans 10:9–10; Acts 22:16; Romans
6:3–4; 1 Peter 3:21
- Ongoing authority for
life: Colossians 3:17; Matthew 28:20
- Guarding the pattern:
Deuteronomy 4:2; 1 Corinthians 4:6
- Seeking Peace on His Terms
- Hear and believe
(Romans 10:17; Mark 16:16)
- Repent (Acts 17:30)
- Confess Christ (Romans
10:9–10)
- Be baptized for
remission, raised to new life (Acts 22:16; Romans 6:3–4; 1
Peter 3:21)
- Walk in the teachings
of Jesus (Matthew 5–7; Luke 9:23)
- Warnings Against
Miscalculation
- Delay and presumption
(Isaiah 55:6; 2 Corinthians 6:2)
- Words without deeds
(Luke 6:46; James 1:22–25)
- Human additions or
subtractions (Deuteronomy 4:2; 1 Corinthians 4:6)
- Applications
- Personal: list areas of
resistance; submit them to Christ’s command
- Family: establish
practices that honor His terms (prayer, Scripture,
reconciliation)
- Congregational: keep
authorized works in focus; pursue prompt peacemaking
- Appeal
- Send the delegation
today; accept the Lord’s terms; continue in loyal obedience
Call to Action
Today, sit down with Luke 14 open.
- Name one area where you
have resisted the Lord’s terms; write the concrete step that
aligns you with His word.
- If you have not obeyed the
gospel, arrange today to be baptized into Christ (Acts 22:16).
- Tell a trusted Christian
your plan and ask for accountability this week.
Scripture Reference List
(with notes)
- Luke 14:31–32 — Parable of
the warring king; prudence and timely peace
- Luke 14:25–27, 33 — Cost of
discipleship stated plainly
- Matthew 7:21 — Doing the
Father’s will and entrance into the kingdom
- Hebrews 5:9 — Eternal
salvation connected to obedience
- Acts 17:30–31 — Universal
call to repent and certainty of judgment
- Mark 16:16 — Belief and
baptism in the Lord’s commission
- Romans 10:9–10 — Confession
with the mouth, belief with the heart
- Acts 22:16 — Arise, be
baptized, wash away sins
- Romans 6:3–4 — Buried with
Christ in baptism, raised to walk in new life
- 1 Peter 3:21 — Baptism as
appeal to God for a good conscience
- Colossians 3:17 — Do all by
the authority of the Lord
- Deuteronomy 4:2; 1
Corinthians 4:6 — Guard the pattern without additions or
omissions
- Luke 9:23 — Daily
cross-bearing as the ongoing path
- Matthew 5–7 — The Lord’s
pattern for daily life
- Isaiah 55:6; 2 Corinthians
6:2 — Urgency: seek the Lord now
Prepared by David Hersey of the
church of Christ at Granby, MO |