When Is Enough, Enough?
Primary Text: Luke 12 (focus: vv. 13–34) — NASB 1995
Supporting Texts: Deuteronomy 21:17; 1 Timothy 6:17–19; Job (theme)
Introduction
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The stores don’t even let one season finish before they push the next. Thanksgiving decorations are out—and Christmas is already shoved in your face.
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It makes you stop and ask a question most people don’t want to answer honestly:
When is enough… enough?
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We sit around tables loaded with food, then throw a good portion away.
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Meanwhile, in places like Nicaragua, some families are thankful when the water “tastes like meat,” because the meat is so scarce.
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We are blessed—far more than we act like it sometimes.
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So here’s the real question:
- Are the things we say we’re thankful for actually enough to satisfy us—not just this week, but for a lifetime?
- Or do we only “act thankful” for a holiday, then go right back to complaining and craving more?
Sermon Outline (Luke 12)
I. The Greed You Don’t Admit Still Controls You
A. The inheritance request (Luke 12:13–15)
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A man comes to Jesus with a family problem:
- “Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me.”
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He is not asking for spiritual help—he is asking Jesus to use moral authority to force money out of his brother’s hands.
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Jesus refuses to play that role:
- “Man, who appointed Me a judge or arbitrator over you?”
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Then Jesus exposes what’s behind the request:
- “Beware, and be on your guard against every form of greed; for not even when one has an abundance does his life consist of his possessions.” (Luke 12:15)
B. Why Jesus responds this way
- Jesus isn’t being unfair—He sees the heart.
- The man’s complaint sounds like “justice,” but the engine underneath is greed.
- The law about inheritance (Deuteronomy 21:17) wasn’t the real issue.
- The real issue was: “I want what I think I deserve.”
C. A plain warning
- If money is what makes you happy, then money is what can wreck you.
- If your heart is squeezed tight with dollars, God can loosen your grip fast.
- Greed isn’t always stealing.
- Sometimes it looks like:
- “I just want what’s fair.”
- “I’m only protecting what’s mine.”
- “I’m just being wise.”
- Jesus says: guard yourself—because greed comes in every form.
Application:
- If your peace rises and falls with your account balance, you’re not living by faith—you’re living by numbers.
- If you fight harder for your “share” than you fight for your soul, your priorities are upside down.
II. The Rich Fool: “More” Does Not Make the Soul Safe
A. The problem is not storage—it’s selfishness (Luke 12:16–21)
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Jesus tells a story about a man with an unusually productive harvest.
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The man says:
- “What shall I do, since I have no place to store my crops?”
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His solution:
- “I will tear down my barns and build larger ones… and I will store all my grain and my goods.”
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There is nothing sinful about building a barn.
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The sin is why he is doing it.
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He talks to himself like this:
- “Soul, you have many goods laid up for many years to come; take your ease, eat, drink and be merry.”
B. God’s verdict
- God says:
- “You fool! This very night your soul is required of you; and now who will own what you have prepared?” (Luke 12:20)
- He planned for crops, but not for death.
- He prepared for comfort, but not for judgment.
- He was rich in storage, but poor toward God.
C. The point Jesus makes (Luke 12:21)
- “So is the man who stores up treasure for himself, and is not rich toward God.”
- He wasn’t condemned for having.
- He was condemned for living like everything he had was for himself.
Cross-application:
- 1 Timothy 6:17–19
- Don’t be conceited.
- Don’t fix your hope on the uncertainty of riches.
- Be rich in good works.
- Be generous and ready to share.
Application:
- If your “extra” never turns into generosity, your “extra” will rot your heart.
- If your plan does not include God, it is not a plan—it’s a delusion.
III. Worry and Obsession Reveal What You Worship
A. Jesus addresses the disciples (Luke 12:22–23)
- Jesus says:
- “Do not worry about your life, as to what you will eat; nor for your body, as to what you will put on. For life is more than food, and the body more than clothing.”
- He is not saying:
- “Don’t work.”
- “Don’t plan.”
- “Don’t provide.”
- He is saying:
- Don’t obsess.
- Don’t let food, clothing, money, and comfort become your god.
B. Balanced perspective
- There’s nothing wrong with having resources.
- There’s nothing wrong with saving.
- The wrong is when those things become:
- your identity,
- your security,
- your joy,
- your excuse to neglect God.
C. A hard, real-life example
- Some couples beg God for a child for years.
- Churches pray for them.
- God answers.
- Then the couple says:
- “We don’t go much anymore—the baby is noisy.”
- So the blessing becomes an excuse to stop worship.
- That tells the truth:
- God gave a gift, and the gift replaced the Giver.
Application:
- If God’s blessings push God down the list, you have turned blessings into idols.
- If you only put God first when trouble hits, your faith is mostly emergency-only faith.
IV. Contentment Is Not a Personality Trait—It’s a Heart Decision
A. What contentment really means
- Contentment is not pretending you don’t want things.
- Contentment is being able to say:
- “Lord, what You’ve given is enough for me to obey You, worship You, and serve You.”
- It’s gratitude that lasts beyond a holiday.
B. God has always demanded the heart
- From the beginning of Scripture to the end, God’s message has been consistent:
- Not performance.
- Not religious show.
- Not emotional theater.
- Give Me your heart.
- You can’t change habits until you change the heart.
C. The final test
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If everything material were taken away:
- money,
- possessions,
- convenience,
- even health,
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would Jesus still be enough?
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Think about Job: stripped of everything, still clinging to God.
Application:
- If Christ is not enough, then you’re not truly content—you’re just temporarily comfortable.
- The question isn’t whether you have a lot.
- The question is whether you can lose it all and still worship.
Conclusion / Invitation
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Luke 12 teaches a simple truth:
- It is not wrong to have possessions.
- It is wrong when possessions have you.
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When God is pushed down the list, judgment will not be a surprise—it will be the result.
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So ask yourself:
- If all the world’s goods were taken away, would knowing Jesus be enough?
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If the answer is “no,” don’t dress it up.
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Ask God for a changed heart.
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Ask for contentment.
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Ask for a renewed focus on what is eternal, not what is temporary.
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Then act on it—today.
Slide Deck (14 Slides)
Slide 1 — When Is Enough, Enough?
- The world always says: “More.”
- Jesus asks: “Enough?” Scripture: Luke 12 (theme)
Slide 2 — The Holiday Mirror
- Abundance on the table
- Waste in the trash
- Gratitude that expires Scripture: Luke 12 (theme)
Slide 3 — The Heart Question
- What truly satisfies you?
- What controls you? Scripture: Luke 12 (theme)
Slide 4 — The Inheritance Complaint
- “Tell my brother to divide the inheritance.” Scripture: Luke 12:13
Slide 5 — Jesus Refuses the Money Game
- “Who appointed Me judge over you?” Scripture: Luke 12:14
Slide 6 — The Warning
- “Be on your guard against every form of greed.” Scripture: Luke 12:15
Slide 7 — Life Is Not Possessions
- “Life does not consist of possessions.” Scripture: Luke 12:15
Slide 8 — The Rich Fool’s Plan
- Bigger barns
- Bigger comfort
- Bigger self Scripture: Luke 12:18–19
Slide 9 — God’s Verdict
- “You fool… this night your soul is required.” Scripture: Luke 12:20
Slide 10 — The Knife-Edge Question
- “Who will own what you prepared?” Scripture: Luke 12:20
Slide 11 — Rich Toward God
- Store up for God, not self. Scripture: Luke 12:21
Slide 12 — Don’t Worship Necessities
- “Do not worry… life is more than food.” Scripture: Luke 12:22–23
Slide 13 — Blessings Can Become Idols
- A gift can replace the Giver.
- Don’t let blessings push God down. Scripture: Luke 12 (principle)
Slide 14 — The Final Test
- If everything vanished…
- Would Jesus still be enough? Scripture: Job (theme) / Luke 12 (call)