Skip to content

Ezekiel 33:30-32

Be Ye Doers of The Word (radio broadcast)

menu_book More on Ezekiel lightbulb 4 illustrations in this sermon

Pastor Martin concludes his series "Take Heed How You Hear" by expounding on the crucial duty of implementation, drawing primarily from Ezekiel 33:30-32, Luke 6:46-49, and James 1:22-25. He argues that true hearing of God's Word culminates not merely in repetition, supplication, or meditation, but in active, conscientious obedience. Through negative examples of those who hear but do not do, and positive commands to be doers of the Word, Martin warns against self-delusion and calls believers to immediate, practical application of divine truth, likening it to building one's life on a solid foundation.

Primary Texts

menu_book
Ezekiel 33:30-32 This passage serves as a primary negative example, illustrating the danger of hearing God's Word with pleasure but failing to obey it.
menu_book
Luke 6:46-49 This passage is a primary text, presenting Jesus's teaching on the wise and foolish builders to underscore the necessity of doing His words, not just hearing them.
menu_book
James 1:22-25 This passage is a primary text, providing the explicit command to be 'doers of the word' and illustrating the self-deception of those who are hearers only.

Outline 7 sections · 25 min

  1. Introduction to the Series and the Duty of Implementation 0:09
  2. Negative Example 1: Ezekiel's Hearers Who Do Not Do 4:45
  3. Negative Example 2: Jesus's Warning to Hearers Only (Luke 6) 8:25
  4. The Established Duty of Implementation 14:38
  5. The Positive Command: Be Doers of the Word (James 1) 16:50
  6. The Activity of Implementation Illustrated (Psalm 119) 21:02
  7. Conclusion and Broadcast Information 23:23

Key Quotes

“No amount of repetition, supplication, or meditation has come to its proper fruition unless we are found implementing, that is, putting into practice what we have heard, in the preaching of the Word of God.”
“Though they do all of this, they come before you, they sit before you, they hear, they hear your words, but do them not.”
“Why mess me with language that acknowledges the dignity of my person and profess submission that if it were an expression of reality would find you in a pattern of universal obedience to me? Not perfect obedience, but universal, detailed, meticulous, conscientious obedience.”
“Crunch time comes when what we hear must be with your hands with your tongue and above all with your heart.”
“I can engage in activities which put me in the path of self-delusion so that my assessment of myself is not a If I came before you this morning with a 50-point outline seeking to persuade you that I was a long-lost, undiscovered heir to the throne of the United Kingdom and that I ought to be there in Buckingham Palace as King Albert, the kindest thing I think most of you would say is, well, that trigeminal neuralgia that was bothering him this past week I think has crept up into his mind. into his brain and he is deluded. He's deluded.”
“Be ye doers of the word and not hearers only deluded.”
“Once he saw the discrepancy between the ways of God and his ways he said I made a beeline to get my feet into God's ways without delay.”

Applications

All listeners

  • Implement, that is, put into practice what you have heard in the preaching of the Word of God.
  • Do not merely listen attentively to what is preached; implement the word of God to avoid condemnation.
  • Ensure your profession of Christ as Lord is matched by a pattern of universal, detailed, meticulous, conscientious obedience.
  • When the word of God is expounded, apply it with your hands, your tongue, and above all, with your heart.
  • Prior to hearing the Word, engage in renewed acts of repentance, putting away all filthiness and wickedness to properly digest and assimilate God's Word.
  • Be doers of the word and not hearers only, lest you be deluded.
  • When you see a discrepancy between God's ways and your ways, make a beeline to get your feet into God's ways without delay, to prevent sin from clouding your moral consciousness.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 35 paragraphs, roughly 25 minutes.

More from the archive