Scott LaPierre Ministries

Learning from the Parable of the Unprofitable Servant (Luke 17:7-10)


Listen Later

On Sunday mornings, we are working our way verse by verse through the Gospel of Luke, and we now arrive at Luke 17:7, where Jesus teaches what is commonly called The Parable of the Unprofitable Servant. These verses confront one of the most subtle dangers in the Christian life: spiritual pride that grows out of faithful service.
Illustration: Why Movement Matters
Over the years, I’ve learned an important lesson through repeated injuries: healing requires movement.
In high school, I pole vaulted competitively. One year, eager to begin practice, I skipped warming up and immediately tore my hamstring. My instinct was to rest it completely. Each time it felt better, I tried running again—only to feel the pain return. That season, I jumped two feet lower than the year before. Later, someone explained that light movement increases blood flow, and blood brings healing.
Years later, during college, I severely separated my shoulder playing tackle football—with no pads. The orthopedic surgeon explained that my injury was worse because the tendons tore off the bone, where there is little blood. Again, the absence of blood meant slower healing.
Then, in 2020, I experienced debilitating sciatic pain. I stayed in bed, thinking rest would heal me. Instead, I worsened. Every doctor I listened to said the same thing: complete inactivity makes things worse. Slowly getting up and walking—painful at first—was the beginning of recovery.
Whether physically, emotionally, or spiritually, God has designed us to be active. Stagnation weakens us. Movement strengthens us.
https://youtu.be/qsYtrLd5NWE
In Luke 17:7-10 Jesus preached The Parable of the Unprofitable Servant. Our response should always be, “We are unworthy servants.”
Table of contentsServing God… and the Danger That Comes With ItThe Parable Explained (Luke 17:7–9)Lesson One (Part One): We Always Have More Work to DoLesson One (Part Two): We Prefer the Master to OurselvesLesson One (Part Three): We Have Never Gone Above and BeyondThe Stunning Reversal: The Master Who ServesConclusion: Grateful, Indebted Servants
Serving God… and the Danger That Comes With It
At this point, you might expect Jesus to emphasize the importance of serving. And serving is important. But in Luke 17:7–10, Jesus addresses something else: the danger that faithful service brings with it.
That danger is pride.
Even when serving the Lord, our flesh tempts us to think:
“God must be impressed with me.”
“Surely I’ve gone above and beyond.”
“After all I’ve done, doesn’t He owe me something?”
There is little uglier than spiritual pride, because it quietly denies God’s ongoing grace—not saving grace, but sanctifying grace. We forget that everything we do for Christ is empowered by Him.
The Parable Explained (Luke 17:7–9)
Jesus asks whether a master would invite his servant—after a long day of plowing or shepherding—to recline at the table. The expected answer is no. Instead, the servant prepares the master’s meal, serves him, and only afterward eats himself.
This imagery was not shocking to Jesus’ audience. The servant was not a volunteer. He was doing what was commanded.
Jesus’ point is not about earthly employment, but our relationship with Him.
Lesson One (Part One): We Always Have More Work to Do
Faithful servants do not decide for themselves when the work is finished. Until Christ returns, there is always more obedience, more faithfulness, more service to render.
Lesson One (Part Two): We Prefer the Master to Ourselves
Notice the order in Luke 17:8:
“Prepare supper for me”
“Serve me”
“Afterward you will eat and drink”
The Christian life is not centered on what we want, but on what Christ wants.
Lesson One (Part Three): We Have Never Gone Above and Beyond
Jesus concludes:
“So you also, when you have done all that you were commanded, say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done what was our duty.’” (Luke 17:10)
Like children calling out, “Watch this!”, we can be tempted to think our obedience is impressive. But even our best service never exceeds our duty—especially when we remember what Christ has done for us.
Charles Spurgeon captured it well:
“Our service put beside Christ’s is like one single grain of dust in comparison with the mighty orb of the sun.”
The Stunning Reversal: The Master Who Serves
Here is the shock of the gospel. Though Luke 17 emphasizes duty in this life, Luke 12 reveals what Christ will do in the next life.
Jesus promises that when He returns, He will seat His faithful servants at the table and serve them (Luke 12:37). This is not contradiction—it is completion.
It echoes John 13, when Jesus girded Himself and washed the disciples’ feet. The Master served His servants then, and He will do so again.
Conclusion: Grateful, Indebted Servants
Jesus does not call us to false humility that says, “I am useless.” He calls us to true humility that remembers how infinitely more Christ has done for us than we could ever do for Him.
When we see that clearly, we gladly say, “We are unprofitable servants,” and we serve Him with joyful, grateful hearts—until the day He tells us to sit down, rest, and be served by Him.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Scott LaPierre MinistriesBy Scott LaPierre

  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5

5

9 ratings